<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?><ns2:project xmlns:ns1="http://gtr.rcuk.ac.uk/gtr/api" xmlns:ns2="http://gtr.rcuk.ac.uk/gtr/api/project" xmlns:ns3="http://gtr.rcuk.ac.uk/gtr/api/fund" xmlns:ns4="http://gtr.rcuk.ac.uk/gtr/api/person" xmlns:ns5="http://gtr.rcuk.ac.uk/gtr/api/project/outcome" xmlns:ns6="http://gtr.rcuk.ac.uk/gtr/api/organisation" ns1:created="2026-06-03T15:52:43Z" ns1:href="http://gtr.ukri.org/gtr/api/projects/092BF1AD-72DC-42FD-B3AA-B9B66E197923" ns1:id="092BF1AD-72DC-42FD-B3AA-B9B66E197923"><ns1:links><ns1:link ns1:href="http://gtr.ukri.org/gtr/api/persons/49E7BF35-DB5C-4154-88EA-30309E80AF27" ns1:rel="PM_PER"/><ns1:link ns1:href="http://gtr.ukri.org/gtr/api/organisations/E784D01E-86EE-4E65-943D-D3CB667BB1E1" ns1:rel="LEAD_ORG"/><ns1:link ns1:href="http://gtr.ukri.org/gtr/api/organisations/E784D01E-86EE-4E65-943D-D3CB667BB1E1" ns1:rel="PARTICIPANT_ORG"/><ns1:link ns1:end="2023-08-30T23:00:00Z" ns1:href="http://gtr.ukri.org/gtr/api/funds/E1E2AB3B-985A-4889-B94F-8FC1FB7DA95C" ns1:rel="FUND" ns1:start="2023-05-31T23:00:00Z"/></ns1:links><ns2:identifiers><ns2:identifier ns2:type="RCUK">10072795</ns2:identifier></ns2:identifiers><ns2:title>Engineering biology for animal-free cheese protein production</ns2:title><ns2:status>Closed</ns2:status><ns2:grantCategory>Grant for R&amp;D</ns2:grantCategory><ns2:leadFunder>Innovate UK</ns2:leadFunder><ns2:abstractText>Plant-based cheese is important. In the UK, we produce over 500,000 tons of dairy cheese per year. However, dairy farming produces a lot of methane, which is a highly harmful greenhouse gas.

As a result, people are changing what they eat, with more people adopting animal-low, or animal-free diets. Food companies are developing more and more plant-based products to meet this need, like plant-based cheese.

There's a challenge in producing enough of the right proteins for animal-free products. Current systems for doing this are expensive to build and operate. Fermtech are an Oxford-based biotech start-up developing an ultra low-cost way to produce animal-free proteins to do the job. The technology harnesses the power of fungi, grown on waste biomass as a feedstock, creating a circular economy, and keeping costs low.

This project will allow us to test how this production system can be developed for commercial-scale production, taking the first step to getting great-tasting, low-carbon, animal-free dairy products on supermarket shelves quickly.</ns2:abstractText></ns2:project>