KEY POINTS
  • Sustainable chemicals start-up Solugen has raised $357 million in a venture funding round led by Singapore's sovereign wealth fund GIC, and Baillie Gifford and joined by several other funds focused on solving the climate crisis.
  • The company makes chemicals from custom enzymes and renewable feedstock. It uses dextrose, a simple sugar, and in the future it aims to convert carbon into useful products like building materials and formaldehyde-free resins.
  • The chemicals industry is the third largest contributor to global carbon emissions, according to the most recent data from IEA research.
Solugen co-founders: CEO Gaurab Chakrabarti and CTO Sean Hunt.

Chemical companies have historically used petroleum, natural gas and phosphates to make their products, exacerbating air and water pollution.

A start-up called Solugen aims to replace many of these ingredients with chemicals using renewable resources like simple sugar.