Turning whisky’s wastewater into pet food rich in Omega-3
Douglas Martin, founder and managing director of MiAlgae, explains how his University of Edinburgh biotech start-up is turning algae into nutritious pet food using a by-product from the Scotch whisky industry.
Walking around a fish market is an experience that can stimulate the senses: there’s the sight of the weird and wonderful fish of all shapes and sizes lined up in their containers; there’s the noise from the buyers and sellers haggling over prices at the auction; there’s the smell of the sea filling the air as the latest catch is landed.
Sadly, not all of those fish at the market will end up being lowered into a chip shop’s deep-fat frier or making it onto the kitchen’s pass at a high-end restaurant. Instead, much of the fish that can’t be sold – either through lack of demand or because there’s no quota available – will be ground up and turned into fishmeal, which will be used as pet food, animal feed, or even food for farmed fish.
Turning wild fish into feed for other animals is simply unsustainable. Already, around 90% of the world’s fish stocks are over-exploited or fully depleted, giving rise to the need for quotas in the first place. As conservationist Sir David Attenborough has reminded us in countless television series, the very future of our seas lies in our hands.
That desire to prevent the over-harvesting of fish was one of my motivations for founding MiAlgae in 2016. My biotechnology company uses algae to create a feedstock that’s rich in Omega-3 oils, just like wild caught fish. And we make that nutrient-packed feed with a little help from Scotland’s national drink – whisky.
The romance and reality of whisky
There’s a romantic side to making whisky. Millions of tourists each year enjoy taking tours around distilleries tucked away in the Highland glens, peering in at the oak casks as they slumber in their vast warehouses, before enjoying a dram of the amber nectar by the fireside back in the comfort of their hotels.
Yet whisky – like any other industrial process – creates by-products that need to be handled in a safe and environmentally-sustainable way. In the past, wastewater from distilleries could simply be released into the local river or loch or sea, but now more stringent environmental protection laws mean that waste needs to be taken away for treatment and disposal.
These rules – which are designed to increase water quality, especially on beaches, bringing benefits to both people and our environment – can lead to an expensive headache for whisky distilleries. Those same rules also lead to an exciting opportunity though.
As a company at the forefront of creating a “circular economy”, in which the waste products from one industry can be turned into the raw materials for another, our company can provide a solution for these distilleries. In effect, we’re taking a “by-product” and turning it into a “co-product”.
How that wastewater is created
It’s fascinating to think that Scotch whisky – the bedrock of a massive industry, which exported the equivalent of 1.14 billion bottles last year [2020] – is made from three simple ingredients: malted barley, water, and yeast. By law, it can only be made in Scotland and must age for at least three years in oak barrels before it can make the magical transition from “new-make spirit” to “Scotch whisky”.
To begin the process, barley is soaked in warm water until it germinates, with a wee shoot poking out from the grain, signalling that the starches in the cereal are being converted into the sugars that are needed to make alcohol. Germination is then halted by drying the grains in a kiln; in the past, these fires would have been lit using peat, which gave a smoky flavour to the barley, but now most distilleries burn gas or kerosene, with peated whiskies confined mostly to the island of Islay in the Inner Hebrides chain off the west coast.
This malted barley, or malt, is then ground down and added to warm water to make a “mash”, dissolving the sugars into a liquid called the “wort”, which is drawn off. The grain that’s left over is called “draff” and is turned into pellets and sold to farmers as protein-rich feed for their cattle.
Yeast is then added to the wort to ferment those sugars into alcohol – in effect, making a strong beer or “wash” that can then be distilled to create a spirit. At its simplest level, distillation involves heating the wash in a big, oddly-shaped copper kettle known as a “still”, with the spirit collected after it has evaporated and condensed before being transferred into wooden casks to slumber for at least three years.
What we do with that waste
What’s left over inside the still after the spirit has been made – the “pot ale” and “spent lees” – is taken out and treated to remove any copper or other toxic substances. Traditionally, pot ale could also be turned into animal feed, or spread onto fields as fertiliser, or pumped into rivers or the sea.
Now, there’s another option; our company takes that nutrient-rich pot ale and uses it to grow algae in special fermentation vessels. The algae strain that we use occurs naturally in our oceans, where it feeds on upwelling nutrients – by researching and replicating this early stage of the food-chain, we are working hand in hand with nature.
Taking this wastewater from the whisky industry gives us a human-grade growth medium in which we can farm our algae. Using a co-product means that we can keep our costs down, producing algae in a very cost-effective way.
When they’re ready, the algae are extracted and turned into feed rich in Omega-3 oils for pets, fish, and farm animals. By removing all those nutrients, our process also turns the pot ale back into clean water.
Meeting pet owners’ sustainability demands
Not only does our process help the Scotch whisky industry to deal with a troublesome waste product, but it also helps pet food manufacturers and pet owners to play their part in tackling over-fishing. That desire on the part of consumers to address the environmental impact of their pet food looks set to accelerate.
Before the pandemic struck, the State of the Pet Industry Report from the Pet Sustainability Coalition and the World Pet Association revealed that 91% of pet professionals expected consumer demand for environmentally-friendly and socially-conscious companies would increase over the next five years. That trend appears to have continued during the pandemic, with an American survey by ingredient supplier TreeTop last year [2020] finding that 22% of owners wanted to see more sustainably-sourced pet food.
Younger people in particular appear to be keen on sustainability. The previous year’s Mintel survey for TreeTop found that 28% of respondents aged 18 to 34 were interested in seeing more sustainably-sourced pet food, compared with 15% among people aged 55 and older.
The increase in pet ownership could stoke that trend even further, with figures from the Pet Food Manufacturers’ Association (PFMA) showing that 3.2 million households in the UK bought a pet during the pandemic, taking the total to 34 million pets spread across 17 million households. Almost two-thirds of those new owners were aged between 16 and 34 – if they match their peers’ interest in sustainability and protecting the environment then the pet food industry’s role in over-fishing could come into even sharper focus.
‘Good health’ – for our seas and for our pets
MiAlgae’s ability to help solve that problem for pet food producers took a further step forward in March [2021] when we appointed global food and pet care specialist David Macnair to our board. David brings with him experience from a broad range of businesses – including Cadbury, Mars, and Campbell’s Soup Company – that will help us to make connections with the pet food industry and beyond.
His experience – and the skills of our other directors and managers – will also help us to expand into other sectors. As well as recycling whisky’s wastewater, the same approach could be used throughout the food and drink industry, giving our company exciting opportunities for expansion.
Last year, we secured £1 million of funding from new investor Hillhouse Group and from existing investors Equity Gap, Old College Capital, and the Scottish Investment Bank. The investment is helping us to scale-up our business and commercialise our process, creating further opportunities for expansion.
I founded MiAlgae while I was still studying for my master’s degree at the University of Edinburgh, which allowed me to access support from the university and from the wider entrepreneurial ecosystem in Scotland and beyond, including through Scottish Enterprise, the Edinburgh Centre for Carbon Innovation, the Scottish EDGE competition, Shell’s LiveWire contest, and Innovate UK. That support has spurred me on to not only begin to tackle the scourge of over-fishing but also to help the Scotch whisky industry to deal with a nuisance co-product; that’s worth raising a dram and saying “cheers” or, as we’d put it in Scotland, “slàinte mhath” – good health.
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