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Monday / December 23. 2024
HomeTypesFoodgrainsMustGrow Biologics secures patent for fumigation of stored vegetables and grains  

MustGrow Biologics secures patent for fumigation of stored vegetables and grains  

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It aims at advancing a solution for the food storage industry particularly for potatoes and grains 

 

 

 Canada based MustGrow Biologics Corp., has announced the exclusive patent licensing from the University of Idaho pertaining to a natural bio pesticide mustard-based treatment of stored produce and other foods, particularly sprout suppression of potatoes. 

Post-harvest sprout suppression is a key element of potato storage. The current annual European sprout suppression market is estimated at US$64 million and over US$100 million globally. The leading agrochemical product for sprout suppression, chlorpropham (“CIPC”), was banned by the European Union on Oct. 8, 2020. CIPC has long been the major global sprout suppressant, widely applied to stored potatoes. 

With this ban now effective, growers will be forced to refrigerate produce, adding an estimated US$150 million expenditure annually in the European Union. The additional capital expenditure and refrigeration energy consumption make this temporary approach unsustainable. Although the ban was anticipated, no effective treatment alternatives have emerged – creating a major problem for existing potato storage sites. 

MustGrow has exclusively licensed from the University of Idaho, U.S. utility patent number 10,588,321 titled “Mustard Meal to Inhibit Sprouting”, which was issued/granted on March 17, 2020 (the “Patent”). The Patent makes matter and method claims to utilize the mustard plant’s active ingredient, allyl isothiocyanate (“AITC”), to control vegetable and potato sprouting without the use of harmful synthetic chemicals. 

MustGrow is advancing a solution for the food storage industry (particularly potatoes and grains), combining expertise in mustard-derived AITC with the newly secured Patent. MustGrow has identified logical partners in relevant global regions based on food product characteristics and economics. 

Emerging literature, from a range of sources, has confirmed a broad array of AITC applications outside of its proven bio pesticide function, including treatment of stored grains and sprout suppression. MustGrow’s intellectual property suite is a platform for several crop protection categories and now stored food protection, aiming to disrupt global agriculture markets that have traditionally been dominated by synthetic chemicals. MustGrow’s existing patent portfolio protects both method-of-use and composition-of-matter claims for its signature mustard-derived approach to controlling soil-borne pests, diseases and weeds.

 Additionally, MustGrow has announced the appointment of Dr. Matthew J. Morra, a leading world expert on value-added products derived from oilseeds, as Scientific Advisor. One of three inventors on the Patent, Dr Morra has extensive expertise in developing mustard-based bio pesticides and is professor emeritus of soil biochemistry at the University of Idaho.

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