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				 However, converting the technology at a commercial scale can be 
				a risky venture, and companies need help testing their products, 
				says Vijay Singh, professor of agricultural and biological 
				engineering and director of the Integrated Bioprocessing 
				Research Laboratory (IBRL) at the University of Illinois. 
 “There is a huge need for facilities like IBRL to help grow the 
				biotech industry,” Singh says. “We work with industry partners 
				to de-risk the technology. They can come here and test their 
				innovations at a small scale, then they can evaluate and make 
				changes before moving on to full commercial scale.”
 
 IBRL opened in September 2018, and in its first year it has 
				already hosted more than 50 projects for 20 different companies. 
				Projects include creating alternative proteins, polymers for 
				cosmetics, animal feed, and much more.
 
              
                
				 
              
				Singh discusses biotech trends and industry implications in a 
				recent article published in Cereal Foods World.
 “Sustainability is a big trend in consumer products. This has 
				created a market pull and companies are trying to address that 
				by using more renewable materials in their products,” he says. 
				“For example, there’s a car that’s made up of polylactic acid. 
				That means the whole car is made from a plastic that can degrade 
				completely. And shoe companies are making shoes that are 100% 
				biodegradable.”
 
 Another major trend in bioprocessing is plant-based products 
				that replace meat, such as meatless burgers. Feeding a growing 
				world population with meat products is not sustainable, Singh 
				says. The solution may be alternative meat products produced 
				with synthetic biology. “These products taste like meat, smell 
				like meat, cook like meat. And they take a lot less resources to 
				produce than meat,” he explains.
 
 At the same time, consumers are moving away from traditional 
				corn processing products such as high fructose corn syrup. This 
				opens up opportunities for new uses of fermented sugars. Many 
				different products can be made from corn-derived sugars, ranging 
				from biodegradable plastics to cosmetics, cleaners, adhesives, 
				and food products.
 
 Along with higher emphasis on sustainability, advances in 
				industrial biotechnology has made production of specialized 
				fermentation organisms much faster and more affordable.
 
 “We can now put pathways inside the microorganisms that ‘eat’ 
				the sugars and convert the carbon into all kinds of value-added 
				products,” Singh says.
 
              
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			Because of the demand for high-value sugar products, 
			some ethanol plants are looking to change their production 
			capacities. There are about 200 dry-grind facilities in the US that 
			produce about 16 billion gallons of ethanol per year. 
			“Demand for ethanol is driven by federal mandate so 
			it is dependent on policy,” Singh says.
 But the demand for high-quality sugars continues to grow, so 
			dry-grind corn plants are starting to retrofit their facilities to 
			accommodate that market.
 
 However, there are considerable challenges in converting these new 
			opportunities into a commercially viable operation. The ability to 
			test product development in a smaller-scale facility can greatly 
			improve the viability of biotech production, Singh says.
 
 “You need a facility where you can generate products at a smaller 
			scale and test them with consumers. If there are things you need to 
			fix, you can fix it at this scale before moving on to demonstration 
			or full commercial scale,” he says.
 
 “Partnering with university-based facilities that are specifically 
			intended to accelerate commercialization is a very good option,” he 
			suggests. “They have the equipment, trained personnel, and 
			analytical capabilities to serve as pilot plants for companies.”
 
 “IBRL offers one such facility,” Singh concludes.
 
 The article, “Industrial Biotechnology: Shaping Corn Biorefineries 
			of the Future,” is published in Cereal Foods World. [DOI: https://doi.org/10.1094/CFW-64-4-0062]. 
			Authors include Vijay Singh, Joel Stone, Jeffrey P. Robert, and 
			Sundeep N. Vani.
 
 The Department of Agricultural and Biological Engineering and the 
			Integrated Bioprocessing Research Laboratory are in the College of 
			Agricultural, Consumer and Environmental Sciences (ACES) and The 
			Grainger College of Engineering at the University of Illinois.
 
			[Source: Vijay SinghWriter: Marianne Stein]
 
			
			 
			
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