Published: September 16, 2008
Genomatica Breakthrough Replaces Petroleum With Sugar in Major Chemical Process
SAN DIEGO, Sept. 16 /PRNewswire/ --San Diego-based Genomatica Inc., a
sustainable chemical company, has proven a novel bio-manufacturing process
capable of producing thousands of tons of a commodity chemical in a single
facility. The foundational chemical, 1,4-butanediol (BDO), is a key raw
material in the manufacturing of hundreds of plastic, rubber and fiber
products. BDO has a worldwide annual production value estimated at more than
$4 billion across the automotive, textile and consumer goods industries.
Genomatica achieved this breakthrough by engineering a microorganism that
has the potential to produce BDO in a global-scale manufacturing plant in less
than one year. Prior to this effort, no one had published evidence of
microorganisms capable of producing BDO. The Genomatica process is expected to
offer substantial cost savings to chemical producers compared with
petrochemical-based processes, as well as provide a 100-percent renewable
pathway by using sugar instead of petroleum as the main input.
Genomatica first produced BDO in February 2008, and subsequently improved
the productivity of the process 1,000-fold in the following few months.
Concurrently, the company created strains of the bacteria that were tolerant
of the concentrations needed to produce large volumes of BDO at reduced cost.
"This demonstration of sustainable chemical bio-manufacturing is a huge
leap and illustrates the power of Genomatica's unique technology and process,"
said Christopher Gann, chief executive officer of Genomatica. "By using
advanced computational modeling and evolution-based methods to rapidly
engineer living organisms, Genomatica can produce valuable chemicals from
renewable feedstocks at low cost."
BDO and the Rising Cost of Chemical Feedstocks
BDO is one of the world's most important commodity chemicals, with
approximately 3 billion pounds produced annually. BDO is a key precursor to
specialty plastics, solvents, fine chemicals, pharmaceuticals, exterior and
under-the-hood automotive components, electrical and electronics components,
as well as apparel fibers. Currently, the chemical is manufactured only from
non-renewable petrochemical feedstocks -- based on oil and natural gas --
through energy-intensive petrochemical processes. With the Genomatica process,
this segment of the chemical industry can move toward sustainable production.
The rising cost of oil and natural gas has caused dramatic increases in
the price of chemicals worldwide, straining chemical manufacturers, impacting
customers downstream in the value chain and even increasing prices for the
consumer.
"Genomatica's breakthrough technology has the potential to move the
chemical manufacturing industry from current petrochemical processes to
modernized bio-manufacturing for a number of very important and widely used
industrial chemicals," said Harvey Blanch, professor of biochemical
engineering at the University of California at Berkeley. "Chemical
manufacturers that take advantage of Genomatica's process can reduce cost with
a sustainable process using 100-percent renewable inputs."
Because of rising oil and natural gas prices, the search for new processes
to produce existing high-volume chemicals from alternative feedstocks in a
cost-competitive manner has intensified. Genomatica is leading the way to a
solution with biotechnology to meet demand for greater feedstock flexibility
and sustainability. BDO is the first product the company has disclosed in its
rapidly maturing pipeline, which targets several other commodity chemicals to
be produced using microorganism-based fermentation.
The Genomatica Technology Platform
Genomatica's breakthrough was made possible by the power and pace afforded
by the company's integrated technology platform. Genomatica scientists use the
platform to rapidly create new forms of microorganisms through traditional
genetic modification, which is guided by detailed designs created with
proprietary computational modeling techniques. With these models, the company
exhaustively explored all ways to make the targeted chemical and then zeroed
in on the optimal designs, providing the precise "blueprints" for further
development.
In a complementary fashion, Genomatica uses its deep understanding of
biological adaptation to create organisms that thrive under adverse conditions
while further increasing their production of the desired chemical product.
Normally microorganisms experience inhibition of growth and productivity when
they produce a nonnative material; here, exactly the opposite is true. By
engineering organisms in this manner, Genomatica can open the door to new
bio-manufacturing processes, gaining substantial economic benefits relative to
traditional hydrocarbon-based petrochemical processes, while helping the
chemical industry advance its sustainable development initiatives.
Genomatica is currently working on improving the yield and productivity of
its BDO process while scaling manufacturing output to meet the demands of
large bioreactors. The company estimates that within a year its BDO process
will cost less than non-renewable hydrocarbon-based processes, even if oil
prices drop to $50 per barrel.
About Genomatica
Genomatica is focused on producing sustainable chemicals. Genomatica is
revolutionizing the chemical industry with groundbreaking technologies that
sustainably transform chemical production processes through bio-manufacturing.
Founded in 2000 by research scientists from the University of California at
San Diego, Genomatica develops a broad range of biologically produced
industrial chemicals from a variety of renewable feedstocks at a fraction of
the cost.
A privately held company, Genomatica is backed by top Silicon Valley
venture capital firms Mohr Davidow Ventures, Alloy Ventures and Draper Fisher
Jurvetson. Genomatica is based inSan Diego.
SOURCE Genomatica
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