Australian company Food Recycle announced that it is seeking a $3 million capital raise to commercialise its technology and scale up in Australia and New Zealand. 

Founded in 2016, Food Recycle has developed technology that converts commercial food waste into animal feed, thereby reducing landfill waste and cutting greenhouse gas emissions. 

Following successful trials with layer hens, prawns, barramundi, and aquaponics, the company is now aiming to raise the needed capital via the crowd-funding platform, Swarmer. 

Australian company Food Recycle announced that it is seeking a $3M crowd-funded capital raise to commercialise its technology and scale up in Australia and New Zealand.
Food Recycle CEO Norm Boyle. Image via Food Recycle.

“The funds raised will be put towards facility mechanical engineering, electrical engineering, and systems design, to allow for the first commercial-scale production facility to be built under the Food Recycle patented technology and knowhow agreement,” said Food Recycle CEO Norm Boyle.

Boyle added, “The funds will also help with cash flow requirements as we look to appoint a technology and knowhow licensee for Australia and New Zealand, which will construct multiple production facilities, with Food Recycle receiving royalty payments on the sale of feed by the licensee.”

Food Recycle said the licensee is expected to build a minimum of 25 production facilities over a 10-year period, with 12 facilities anticipated in the first five years.

Australian company Food Recycle announced that it is seeking a $3M crowd-funded capital raise to commercialise its technology and scale up in Australia and New Zealand.
Food Recycle food waste streams. Image via CSIRO.

According to the Australian Government’s Department of Climate Change, Energy, the Environment, and Water (DCCEEW), 30 per cent of all human food is wasted globally. 

Food Recycle says that other processes only partially address the problem by creating secondary products from food waste, whereas Food Recycle takes the innovative step of using food waste to produce food directly.

“This capital raise provides everyone the chance to get in on the ground floor with a technology that is making a positive environmental difference in the world,” said Boyle.

Food Recycle says it has developed a patented process to efficiently handle food waste from various sources, such as restaurants, abattoirs, farms, and processors. Each food waste stream is individually processed, analysed, and stored separately as ingredients. 

“We then measure the nutritional and amino acid profile of each ingredient and mix them together to create complete feeds,” explains Boyle. Two tonnes of food waste can be converted into one tonne of complete feed suitable for poultry, pigs, and aquaculture.

Food Recycle says the process not only prevents methane generation but also eliminates every known biosecurity risk at no additional cost.

Australian company Food Recycle announced that it is seeking a $3M crowd-funded capital raise to commercialise its technology and scale up in Australia and New Zealand.
A scientist at CSIRO’s aquaculture facility.

According to the company, rigorous trials conducted by CSIRO, Western Sydney University (WSU), and the University of New England (UNE) have demonstrated the viability of Food Recycle’s process. 

The trials showed that food waste could be removed from landfill, reintroduced into the food chain, and converted into animal feed that produces larger, healthier hens, eggs, and fish.

“We wanted to get the science exactly right before scaling up, and we’ve got the data to showcase the technology’s success using an evidence-based approach,” says Boyle.

The Swarmer crowd-funding campaign entered a three-week Expressions of Interest (EOI) phase on 8 August, followed by a three-week investment phase. 

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