Tag: Sophie’s Bionutrients
Sophie’s Moving to Plant-based Food Mecca
Oct 29, 2021 | Food & Feed
Vegconomist .com reported this week that Sophie’s Bionutrients, based in Singapore, is planning to...
Read MoreSophie’s on Forbes Asia 100 to Watch List
Aug 24, 2021 | Industry
Sophie’s Bionutrients, a next-generation sustainable urban food production technology company...
Read MoreNewsBits…July 15, 2021
Jul 15, 2021 | NewsBits
Veramaris adds Johan Brouwer to its Development Team Johan Brouwer has joined Veramaris’ business...
Read MoreSophie’s Bionutrients Cooks Up a New Approach to Dumplings
Jun 4, 2021 | Food & Feed
Sophie’s Bionutrients, a next-generation sustainable urban food production technology company, has...
Read MoreSophie’s Develops Microalgae-based Milk Alternative
May 4, 2021 | Food & Feed
Sophie’s Bionutrients, a Singapore-based next-generation sustainable urban food production...
Read MoreNewsBits…April 8, 2021
Apr 8, 2021 | NewsBits
An Unlikely Bond: Bad Algae Meets Bad Plastic and Falls in Love Scientists studying cladophora...
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November 27, 2023: Australia’s first high-level organization to serve the commercial seaweed industry officially launched in Canberra on November 16, 2023. The Australian Sustainable Seaweed Alliance (ASSA) represents ten corporate members across six states and was launched to advance environmentally responsible farming and production, strategic research and development, and scientific and biotech-related commercialization. READ MORE...
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November 20, 2023: A research team from IIT Gandhinagar, a leading technical institution in India, has found that beads made from a combination of sea algae, salt, and nanoparticles can be used to remove dyes from wastewater pollution created in the dye and chemical industries. READ MORE...
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November 17, 2023: Isis Central Sugar Mill, 300km north of Brisbane, Australia, will soon be home to ponds growing algae fed by the mill’s wastewater. The mill will harvest the carbon dioxide created when they burn fiber left over from crushing cane to make electricity and use the nutrients in the wastewater to feed the algae, which is intended for food and fuel. READ MORE...