EnviroTechInvestment

A Nottingham-based EnviroTech developing a sustainable alternative to synthetic fertilisers has raised 拢4.9m to scale its solution and expand into Southeast Asia.

NetZeroNitrogen (NZN) was founded in 2022 by biologists Gary Devine and Alan Burbidge, along with former Red Arrows pilot turned entrepreneur Justin Hughes.

The startup is creating a biofertiliser that uses naturally occurring endophytic bacteria (such as fungi) to colonise crops.聽

Field trials show that a single application of the product can significantly reduce reliance on synthetic nitrogen fertilisers (SNFs), increase yields and improve crop quality.

The new round brings the company鈥檚 total funding to 拢6.1m and was co-led by Europe鈥檚 World Fund and US-based Azolla Ventures. UK innovation agency Innovate UK also took part.聽

NZN鈥檚 solution doesn鈥檛 involve genetic modification and doesn鈥檛 require new farming equipment, giving the company a regulatory edge in the EU and other markets and making adoption easier for farmers.聽

Win-Win as FoodTech raises 拢3m & onboards big industry players

鈥淢ost alternatives come with a green premium but this is effectively a green discount 鈥 we鈥檙e greener and cheaper at the same time,鈥 explained CEO Hughes.聽

鈥淭he dependency on SNF is unsustainable. We鈥檙e taking on a challenge with global consequences, and I鈥檓 excited to have the fantastic teams at World Fund and Azolla supporting us along the way.鈥

SNFs, still widely produced via the century-old Haber-Bosch process, contribute around 2 per cent of total global greenhouse gas emissions and emit 8m tonnes of nitrous oxide each year 鈥 a gas nearly 300 times more potent than carbon dioxide.聽

NZN claims its product can reduce fertiliser production emissions by up to 88 per cent compared to conventional SNFs.

鈥淚f the Haber Bosch process was invented today it would be banned, like alcohol or tobacco,鈥 Hughes continued.聽

鈥淲ith our product, there is no transmission loss and therefore no nitrate or nitrous oxide pollution. You’re placing the fuel (bacteria) next to the engine (plant cells). The scale of this opportunity is enormous.聽

鈥淲e鈥檙e talking about an idea from a small lab in the UK transforming a $200bn global market.鈥

The company, which has just nine employees, has already run successful trials in several ASEAN countries and secured written interest from a major Asian agri-input distributor.聽

The new funding will help it grow its team in the region, complete certification processes, and finalise manufacturing and commercial agreements ahead of a 2026 market launch.

Dr Nadine Geiser, principal at World Fund, added: 鈥淲idespread use of urea, ammonium and nitrate-based fertilisers is one of the world鈥檚 largest sources of greenhouse gas emissions, and it is leaving soil microbiomes in a dire state across the world. NZN offers the ideal solution.聽

鈥淭his exciting biotech company faces no regulatory barriers to immediate adoption, and it has a powerful founding team with the perfect combination of scientific and entrepreneurial expertise to succeed.鈥

Dragons鈥 Den star Bartlett quits PR agency he bought