

From Milk to Microbes Could Taupo Bio Valley Feed the Future?
The concept is simple but powerful. Imagine a Taupo Bio Valley stretching across New Zealand's geothermal corridor, where renewable energy, industrial heat and biotechnology come together to produce the next generation of food ingredients and nutritional products. Precision fermentation facilities could manufacture animal-free whey protein, casein, collagen and specialised food ingredients using microbes rather than livestock. Geothermal energy would provide the stable power
7 hours ago1 min read


The Zespri Paradox Is New Zealand’s Canary In The Coal Mine
A kiwifruit grown in the Bay of Plenty travels 18,500 kilometres to Germany and can still sell for less than the same fruit sitting on a New Zealand supermarket shelf. Meanwhile, imported butter is increasingly appearing at prices below locally produced butter in New Zealand supermarkets. For many consumers it feels absurd. For New Zealand, it may be one of the most important economic signals of the decade - the Zespri Paradox.
1 day ago2 min read


Nestlé Bets on Precision Fermentation as Infant Nutrition Enters a New Era
Baby formula may be about to join the growing list of foods being produced with biotechnology rather than traditional agriculture. Food giant Nestlé has backed US biotech company Helaina, which uses precision fermentation to produce proteins found in human breast milk. The move signals that some of the world's largest food companies are looking beyond alternative meat and towards specialised infant nutrition products where biotechnology can deliver ingredients that are diffic
3 days ago1 min read


How New Zealand Regulated Away a Billion-Dollar Seaweed Opportunity
New Zealand did not lose a seaweed company. It lost a seat at the table of a rapidly emerging global methane-reduction industry.
CH4 Global was established in New Zealand in 2019 with the goal of commercialising Asparagopsis seaweed as a methane-reducing livestock feed supplement. The technology works. Research has repeatedly shown methane reductions of up to 90 percent or more in cattle. Investors backed the company. Global demand emerged. International partnerships followe
5 days ago2 min read


Food From Air Lands In America’s Protein Powder Market
The first US consumer product made with Solar Foods’ Solein® has landed and it is not a burger, milk, snack bite or futuristic food demo. It is a ready-to-mix protein powder from Ambrosia Collective, launched under its Planta brand in salted caramel coldbrew flavour, with 20g of protein per serving and 0g of sugar.
6 days ago1 min read


Global Collagen Goes Cellular- Opo Bio Sees A New Zealand Opportunity
For years the cultivated meat sector sold the world a future burger. But while investors chased steaks grown in stainless steel tanks, another opportunity was quietly emerging inside the same bioreactors - collagen currently valued at $10-$12billion and for cast to double in the next decade.
Jun 22 min read


Herbs Maketh A Meal As Science Says Basil & Garlic Could Be Quietly Rewiring The Veggie Industry
The future of vegetables may not depend on forcing consumers to “eat healthier” at all. It may depend on flavour. New research published in Nutrition Reviews has found that adding herbs and spices to vegetables significantly increases the likelihood consumers will choose them and importantly, actually eat them. In commercial cafeteria trials, seasoned vegetables consistently outperformed plain steamed versions, with diners selecting herb-seasoned broccoli, green beans and cau
May 301 min read


Kiwi World-First Cellular Almond Milk Signals New Era For Plant Dairy
New Zealand biotech startup Forever Harvest may have just landed one of the most consumer-relevant future food breakthroughs yet - a pilot production of what it says is the world’s first cellular almond milk. Forget the lab-coat headlines for a moment. This is really about one thing consumers already understand as almond milk booms globally. Right now though the almond industry itself is under serious pressure from water shortages, climate instability and rising production co
May 262 min read








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