0
Article ? AI-assigned paper type based on the abstract. Classification may not be perfect — flag errors using the feedback button. Tier 2 ? Original research — experimental, observational, or case-control study. Direct primary evidence. Sign in to save

Growing a circular economy with fungal biotechnology: a white paper

Fungal Biology and Biotechnology 2020 494 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 50 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Vera Meyer, Evelina Y. Basenko, Nina Gunde‐Cimerman, Arthur F. J. Ram, J. Philipp Benz, Éric Record, Gerhard H. Braus, Mark X. Caddick, Nina Gunde‐Cimerman, Michael Csukai, Ronald P. de Vries, Drew Endy, Jens C. Frisvad, Nina Gunde‐Cimerman, Arthur F. J. Ram, Volha Shapaval, Thomas Haarmann, Yitzhak Hadar, Kim Hansen, Rob Johnson, Nancy P. Keller, Nada Kraševec, Uffe Hasbro Mortensen, Rolando Perez, Thomas Haarmann, Thomas Haarmann, Arthur F. J. Ram, Éric Record, Phil Ross, Volha Shapaval, Charlotte Steiniger, Hans van den Brink, Hans van den Brink, Jolanda M. van Munster, Oded Yarden, Oded Yarden, Han A. B. Wösten

Summary

Researchers outlined how fungal biotechnology can drive a shift away from petroleum-based products toward a sustainable circular economy, offering solutions ranging from biodegradable plastics to food, fuel, and materials — with the potential to significantly reduce plastic pollution and greenhouse gas emissions.

Fungi have the ability to transform organic materials into a rich and diverse set of useful products and provide distinct opportunities for tackling the urgent challenges before all humans. Fungal biotechnology can advance the transition from our petroleum-based economy into a bio-based circular economy and has the ability to sustainably produce resilient sources of food, feed, chemicals, fuels, textiles, and materials for construction, automotive and transportation industries, for furniture and beyond. Fungal biotechnology offers solutions for securing, stabilizing and enhancing the food supply for a growing human population, while simultaneously lowering greenhouse gas emissions. Fungal biotechnology has, thus, the potential to make a significant contribution to climate change mitigation and meeting the United Nation's sustainable development goals through the rational improvement of new and established fungal cell factories. The White Paper presented here is the result of the 2nd Think Tank meeting held by the EUROFUNG consortium in Berlin in October 2019. This paper highlights discussions on current opportunities and research challenges in fungal biotechnology and aims to inform scientists, educators, the general public, industrial stakeholders and policymakers about the current fungal biotech revolution.

Sign in to start a discussion.

Share this paper