GEA inaugurates technology center to prepare processes and products for commercial production
GEA’s new food Application and Technology Center of Excellence (ATC) in Hildesheim, Germany, will act as a central hub for piloting processes and products for the alternative protein industry.
The shift to plant-based foods, cultivated meat and products such as microbially produced dairy proteins promises to feed future generations in a climate-friendly way. At the new technology center, GEA’s new food experts will be using a cell cultivation and fermentation pilot line to fast-track innovations from the lab to commercial-scale manufacturing.
The technology will ensure the commercial feasibility of new food products as the new testing platform at the ATC bridges the gap between the test bench and industrial-scale production without customers having to invest in large-scale plant from the outset.
“Establishing and scaling up a new food production facility is a major task,” said Heinz Jürgen Kroner, senior vice president new food at GEA. “In many cases, new food producers are still stuck at the lab scale – with the hygiene, aseptic and process requirements that involves. On the other hand, industrial-scale manufacturing presents much greater technical and financial challenges. At the ATC, our process experts explore the potential for mass production in order to make this step manageable for food manufacturers. Ultimately, GEA and our customers want to work together on the development of safe, affordable new food products for consumers.”
The development is to help manufacturers rethink meat and dairy products with cell-based meat alternatives now making their way onto restaurant tables, the research focus is turning to precision fermentation for milk proteins.
One of GEA’s first customers in this field is Imagindairy, a scale-up from Israel. Speaking at the opening event, the company’s CEO Eyal Afergan said: “We want to make dairy products without harming the planet. To make that happen, we harness the ancient art of fermentation and combine it with science. This lets us create milk proteins with the taste, functionality, mouthfeel and nutritional value that we love about milk. Together with GEA, we can pave the way to bringing this innovation faster to the market, with the highest possible quality standards.”
Alternatively sourced proteins can help reduce the environmental impact of our food system and help feed the world’s growing population. The shift to new food is going hand in hand with the development of regenerative agriculture.
GEA believes new food will be a growth driver for the business and the wider food industry, having been identified as one of the growth drivers in the GEA Mission 26 strategy. A dedicated new food business unit has been furthering the development of cell-based protein synthesis since 2022.