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China Approves Mycoprotein as New Food Ingredient
China has just made one of the biggest protein calls of the decade and barely anyone outside the industry has clocked it. The National Health Commission has approved mycoprotein (Fusarium venenatum) as a new food raw material for the first time, thanks to an application by Jiangxi Fushine Biotechnology.
1 min read


CRISPR Mycoprotein Gets a Consumer Upgrade
Consumers might not care about CRISPR Mycoprotein, Fusarium venenatum, or metabolic engineering, but they absolutely care about food that’s cheaper, cleaner, and doesn’t taste like damp cardboard. That’s why this new “super-mycoprotein” - breakthrough matters. Researchers have taken the fungus behind mainstream mycoprotein (think Quorn) and hacked it to grow 88% faster, using 44% less sugar, and slashing emissions by up to 60%.
1 min read


Australia’s Food Security Reframed - Biomanufacturing as Defence Strategy
In a world of weather shocks and geopolitical tension, Cellular Agriculture Australia has thrown down the gauntlet — food isn’t just sustenance, it’s national security. Their new white paper “Made & Grown: The Future of Food Biotechnology & Biomanufacturing in Australia” argues that investing in biomanufacturing is no longer optional; it’s a sovereign imperative.
1 min read
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