HomeNewsWorldBayer joins in $100 million investment bet on agricultural biotech startup

Bayer joins in $100 million investment bet on agricultural biotech startup

Its Bayer LifeScience Center division, along with biotech firm Ginkgo Bioworks, is forming a startup to focus on developing biological solutions to reduce the use of nitrogen-based fertilizer, or make farmers' use more efficient, company officials said this week.

September 14, 2017 / 09:45 IST
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Bayer CropScience | The company's FY20 operating profit grew 50.94 percent to Rs 725.70 crore. In FY21 so far, the stock price has risen 55 percent to Rs 5347.10 as on November 24, 2020. Institutional stake for March, June, and September quarters. FIIs holding:  2.17%, 2.34%, and 2.79%, respectively. MF holding: 9.81%, 9.96%, and  10.05% respectively.
Bayer CropScience | The company's FY20 operating profit grew 50.94 percent to Rs 725.70 crore. In FY21 so far, the stock price has risen 55 percent to Rs 5347.10 as on November 24, 2020. Institutional stake for March, June, and September quarters. FIIs holding:  2.17%, 2.34%, and 2.79%, respectively. MF holding: 9.81%, 9.96%, and  10.05% respectively.

Germany's Bayer AG , one of the world's biggest agricultural chemical companies, is joining a $100 million bet that the next big breakthrough in crop fertilizers will be found inside a biological Petri dish.

Its Bayer LifeScience Center division, along with biotech firm Ginkgo Bioworks, is forming a startup to focus on developing biological solutions to reduce the use of nitrogen-based fertilizer, or make farmers' use more efficient, company officials said this week.

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The venture will be backed via a Series A investment from the two companies and hedge fund Viking Global Investors LP. The funding round closed on Wednesday. Bayer and Ginkgo Bioworks officials declined to discuss financial details or individual investment amounts.

The still-unnamed business will focus on plant-based microbes, particularly finding ways for microorganisms to help plants and the soil assimilate nitrogen molecules from the air or other sources, Gingko Bioworks Chief Executive Jason Kelly said in an interview.