USA - Switch Bioworks Awarded $2M in Federal Funding for Technology to Reduce Synthetic Nitrogen Fertilizer in Crop Production

19.01.2025 345 views

Switch Bioworks, a biotechnology company developing low-cost and sustainable fertilizers, has been awarded a $2 million grant from the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) Advanced Research Projects Agency-Energy (ARPA-E) to research and develop a biotechnological approach turning microbes into nitrogen fertilizer producers.

The grant will catalyze and expand Switch Bioworks' R&D, which is centered on enabling nitrogen-fixing microbes to compete and establish themselves on crop plant roots before switching to fertilizer production – an industry-wide challenge that has been limiting biofertilizer cost and performance. The product will be applied at planting with existing farmer practices and have superior unit economics and sustainability benefits over traditional fertilizers.

 

"Engineering commercially relevant biological nitrogen fixation for cereal crops like corn has challenged scientists for over 50 years," said Founder and CEO of Switch Bioworks, Dr. Tim Schnabel. "This grant is a major endorsement of our science-first approach and will allow us to pursue new, high-impact research directions towards our goal of dropping the cost of fertilizer for farmers while being stewards of the environment."

Switch Bioworks' project is one of nine selected for funding under ARPA-E's program: Technologies to Emend and Obviate Synthetic Nitrogen's Toll on Emissions (TEOSYNTE). This program supports the development of new technologies that lower nitrous oxide emissions, a greenhouse gas from nitrogen fertilizers with a global warming potential over 250 times higher than carbon dioxide.

"We are delighted to have been selected to participate in this ambitious ARPA-E program," says Principal Investigator Dr. Marcelo Bueno Batista. "This funding will enable our team to pursue critically important R&D projects in building and tuning genetic switches to optimize their benefit on root colonization and nitrogen delivery."

Nearly half of U.S.-grown corn is used for ethanol production, a key ingredient in fuels like motor gasoline and other chemicals. The nitrogen fertilizer required to grow corn is not only the biggest polluter in the bioethanol supply chain but also one of the biggest budget costs in modern farm operations. Development of new technologies to reduce reliance on synthetic nitrogen fertilizer will substantially impact the environment and economy, safeguarding the future of agriculture and energy production in the U.S.

About Switch Bioworks

Switch Bioworks, the living fertilizer company, was founded out of Stanford University in 2022 and is headquartered in San Carlos, CA. The company's internationally trained team of experts develops microbes that produce sustainable nitrogen fertilizer powered by next-generation synthetic biology. As part of the growing global bioeconomy, Switch Bioworks pledges its mission to improve planet health while also dropping the price of fertilizer at the farm gate. Find out more at www.switchbioworks.com.

 

Source - https://www.prnewswire.com/

12.04.2026

Canada - Saskatchewan expands emergency strychnine access ahead of summer rollout

Saskatchewan has secured a significant expansion for the emergency use of two per cent liquid strychnine to control Richardson’s ground squirrels, with provincial officials and municipal leaders calling the move an important step, while noting some areas remain excluded.

12.04.2026

Pakistan - Farmers demand emergency measures to protect wheat crop from damage

Khalid Nawaz Sadhraich, Central Spokesman of PTI Kisan Wing has said that the ready to harvest wheat crop faces imminent ruin unless the government immediately addresses the critical hurdles hampering the harvest. 

12.04.2026

USA - Alaska peony farmers receive aid after years of crop damage

Peony farmers across the state are getting financial help after multiple years of damaging weather.

12.04.2026

Armenia to restart agricultural insurance program - minister

The agricultural insurance initiative in Armenia will recommence on February 15, 2026, stated Minister of Economy Gevorg Papoyan.

12.04.2026

India - AI chatbot helps farmers access government schemes

Indian farmers can now access information about government welfare schemes through Kisan e-Mitra, a voice-enabled artificial intelligence chatbot launched by the Ministry of Agriculture and Farmers’ Welfare. 

12.04.2026

India - Siddipet farmers dispute Revanth Reddy's claim on damaged crop compensation

Chief Minister A Revanth Reddy's public claim that compensation was paid to farmers for rain-induced crop losses has triggered outrage in Siddipet, with farmers asserting that not a single rupee of input subsidy has reached them despite repeated losses.

09.04.2026

Moldova - Farmers received 117 million lei in insurance subsidies

The Agency for Investments and Payments in Agriculture (AIPA) announced that it has completed the payment of insurance subsidies (70% of the amount of insurance premiums) for 654 farmer applications received between February 1 and September 30, 2025. The total amount of subsidies to this category for last year amounted to LE 117.08 million.

09.04.2026

Philippines - Antique farmers urged to plant drought-resistant crops ahead of El Niño

The Antique Office of the Provincial Agriculturist is advising farmers to grow drought-resistant crops in preparation for the possible effects of El Niño.