Skip to content

Allozymes claims proprietary tech increases active yields, boosts sustainability

  • by

In the beauty and personal care market, the demand for natural ingredients is insatiable. It stems from the overwhelming belief that natural ingredients are always superior to synthetic ones.

No matter which side of the fence you sit on, there is one fact we cannot ignore – natural ingredients are not always the most environmentally responsible option.

“We want naturals, but we are killing nature in the process,”​ said Peyman Salehian, CEO of Allozymes, a Singapore-based biotechnology firm.

Speaking to CosmeticsDesign-Asia, Salehian expressed his shock upon learning that it takes 10 tons of tomato skin to extract three kilograms of phytoene.

“The question for cosmetics today is: how many resources are needed to shift everything from synthetics to naturals? The answer is that it’s definitely not possible. If you wanted to do it, you would need land that is 70 times bigger than the earth itself. Even then, it would be better to use those materials for food rather than a cosmetic ingredient.”

This has led companies to “copy and paste”​ what they find in nature using a bioreactor. However, this technology is costly and slow, Salehian continued. “It takes years and 90% of the time it fails.”

Salehian co-founded Allozymes in 2019 with the aim of developing natural ingredients in a more planet-responsible manner, while also reducing cost and time. The company’s is able to do so using its proprietary microfluidics technology.

“We have 200 times higher chance of success compared to the current technology. So as a result, the engineering time is much shorter. So rather than years, it normally takes two months for us to engineer one enzyme,” Salehian said.

.