After successful a $1 million prize, here’s what’s subsequent for Tanzanian agritech startup NovFeed

Tanzanian agritech startup NovFeed co-founders Diana Orembe and Otaigo Elisha communicate on NovFeed’s victory within the Milken Institute and Motsepe Basis Innovation Prize.

Final month, Tanzanian biotech startup NovFeed gained the Milken Institute and Motsepe Basis competition’s $1 million grant prize cash for agritech innovation. NovFeed’s product providing includes the usage of biomass to supply fish feed. The feed is cheaper to supply and presents extra dietary worth in comparison with present merchandise available in the market, the corporate claims.

TechCabal spoke to Diana Orembe and Otaigo Elisha, co-founders of the startups, to study extra in regards to the product, their success within the competitors, in addition to their ideas on the state of agritech in Africa.

Please inform us extra about NovFeed and the issue you are attempting to resolve via your answer.

Diana Orembe: NovFeed was born again in 2019 with the aim to assist to advertise sustainable aquaculture by producing different protein to exchange the unsustainable fish meal and soybean within the aquafeed. The purpose of this was to supply an inexpensive feed that may assist the farmers enhance their profitability. 

The size of the issue is in the truth that presently, aquafeed globally is produced through the use of fish meal. Fish meal is unsustainable nevertheless it nonetheless accounts for over 70% of manufacturing prices as it’s largely exported from Vietnam and Netherlands. So we noticed this problem and we researched it. We then determined to use science as a device to assist overcome this problem and discover a method to assist the farmers.



Our biotechnology answer includes amassing the natural waste that was supposed to finish up within the landfills after which utilizing micro organism to show this natural waste right into a renewable protein ingredient with a really excessive protein profile of round 70% and different helpful and essential vitamins. Alongside the method, we additionally recognized that the byproduct that we had after harvesting the protein ingredient is a liquid biofertilizer with a variety of probiotic micro organism that has big potential in regenerating the soil and supporting the natural farming of fruit and veggies. 

What challenges would you say you might have confronted in making an attempt to scale up the answer?

Otaigo Elisha: To start out with, our answer could be very novel and has high-tech points. This makes accessing the tools we have to scale to an industrial scale, each by way of manufacturing and analysis and growth, somewhat costly. Keep in mind that we’re regularly making an attempt to find different merchandise like enzymes and components which may be produced via the system and that requires fixed analysis and growth.

DO: As well as, scaling biotech corporations in Africa can also be one other problem that we confronted as a result of it’s an trade that has not but grown extensively. So generally you want inspiration, mentorship, and so forth, however that’s not accessible. Additionally, expertise can also be laborious to come back by too within the type of scientists. Most of those would somewhat work with established corporations than a startup. 

By way of traction, how a lot would you say you might have attained thus far?

DO: We now have been capable of proceed to do R&D and uncover a consortium of microbes that may convert this natural waste into protein biomass. Secondly, we’ve examined the answer on actual prospects, the farmers and we’ve collected a variety of metrics by way of the expansion efficiency, survival fee and by way of digestibility of the product. Moreover, we’ve additionally elevated financial worth for farmers by way of decreasing value and likewise decreasing the maturation interval of the fish.  We now have attracted a number of different companions which can be working with us in numerous capacities, from teaching to mentorship coaching and different areas. 

How was your expertise with the competitors from deciding to enter to ultimately successful the $1 million prize cash?

OE: The Milken competitors runs for nearly one yr. So we began by submitting our thought on the platform which additionally has assets to enhance it. This additionally got here with the Stanford course that we attended for 2 weeks. We additionally acquired a mentor with a background in biotechnology which was key for us to utilise in growing our enterprise mannequin.

We then made it to the highest 25 and submitted the analysis protocols and proceeded to conduct our area trials. We collected a variety of helpful data from the animal feed producers, farmers, and shoppers of fish. These insights helped us to develop a closing report that confirmed how one of these different feed helped farmers minimize prices, enhance the efficiency on the farm degree by way of the fish progress fee, and likewise by way of slicing the maturation interval from eight to seven or six months. 

As soon as we had been achieved in that part, we submitted all of the paperwork plus the information that we collected and different data that helped the judges to determine the highest 5 and ultimately the grand prize. 

NovFeed intends to make use of the prize cash to broaden manufacturing capability. (Picture supply: Supplied)

What is going to you employ the $1 million prize cash for?

OE: We’re planning to make use of the prize cash to pilot NovFeed and guarantee that we’re producing the ultimate product at an even bigger capability in order that we are able to attain extra farmers and enhance our impression throughout Tanzania and past. But in addition, we plan on investing in steady R&D in order that we are able to proceed to enhance the effectivity of our product and likewise innovate new merchandise. 

DO: We additionally plan on utilizing the prize cash to construct out our personal lab. Thus far, we’ve been utilising the college lab for the manufacturing of the biomass and likewise trialling it. In that method, we are able to significantly speed up our turnaround time.

What position do you assume biotech improvements like NovFeed’s can play in rising agriculture in Africa?

DO: Talking on a broader scale, agriculture in Africa employs a good portion of the inhabitants. For instance, in Tanzania, it employs nearly 70% of the inhabitants. We see presently that the identical sector is going through a variety of challenges together with local weather change. Expertise provides us an enormous alternative to deal with these challenges, making certain that farmers are extra productive, and therefore key contributors to nationwide meals safety. 

OE: On high of that, biotech will revolutionise the way in which we produce and feed our rising inhabitants. With local weather change which is affecting all the things from the way in which we produce our meals, to the seeds, to the soil that we develop crops on, we have to apply science in an effort to provide you with new methods of manufacturing. We’d like science to provide you with new seeds, we want science to provide you with new fields, and we want science to provide you with new strategies to supply extra meals through the use of fewer assets. We have to help biotech startups in order that by 2050, we’ll be capable of feed our 9 billion inhabitants.

Is there anything you want to add about NovFeed?

OE: We invite growth companions to work with us in numerous capacities, together with experience, market linkage. and different areas we might have help. 

DO: Moreover, we additionally want to use this chance to encourage all of the Africans who’re planning or have any thought about biotech to show it right into a enterprise. It might appear laborious at first however we additionally began from zero and right here we’re with such a prestigious award.

Interview has been edited for size and readability.

Get the very best African tech newsletters in your inbox

Read More

Vinkmag ad

Read Previous

Studying to stay with — and love — bears and eagles in Colombia’s cloud forest

Read Next

Gov. SANWO-OLU Commissions 3 Housing Estates In 1 Day

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Most Popular