University of Manchester: GEIC partner AEH secures £3.5m for agri-tech manufacturing in Manchester
AEH Innovative Hydrogel, the agri-tech firm founded and led by The University of Manchester alumnus Dr Beenish Siddique, has secured a funding agreement worth £3.5 million with Canada-based biotech investor Terra Sana Holdings, with a view to scaling up AEH’s manufacturing capability in Greater Manchester.
This new investment recognises AEH’s breakthrough contribution to a more sustainable future by using a unique hydrogel – branded GelPonic and developed in the Graphene Engineering Innovation Centre (GEIC) – as a growing medium that is biodegradable and fully sustainable.
The pioneering technology will reduce the use of fresh water in agriculture and therefore enable nations like the UK to grow a wider range of indigenous foods – so reducing “food miles” – while enabling better yields for farmers in developing nations, where poor quality soils and limited rainfall put pressure on water supply and productivity.
Investment in Greater Manchester
Terra Sana’s investment will provide AEH with capability to fully develop its vertical farming system and to set up a manufacturing facility in Greater Manchester. The new funding is for an initial sum of £1.5m with a follow-on option to subscribe for £2m in 18 months – and it builds on a £1m investment already made by Innovation UK to AEH.
CEO and founder Beenish Siddique said the new funding was welcome as it will accelerate already established sales opportunities for its GelPonic systems on a global basis. Beenish added that this major investment could provide a boost to female entrepreneurs.
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Equity investment in women-led start-ups has been very poor previously and it is very encouraging that Terra Sana have invested in me and the company I established. I am thankful for their faith in our product and the shared vision.”
Beenish Siddique, CEO AEH Innovative Hydrogel
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AEH is based in the Graphene Engineering Innovation Centre (GEIC), the world-leading materials innovation accelerator based at The University of Manchester. The company was initially supported through the ERDF Bridging the Gap programme, and the move to the GEIC came after AEH Director Dr Farid Khan arranged initial match funding for the subsequent £1m Innovate UK grant.
Ray Gibbs, Chairman of AEH, said: “Setting up AEH in the GEIC gave the company a platform to fast-track its product development. Fundamentally, the government-backed grant awarded in 2020 has been vindicated, with the original investment now being trebled with private sector funding. What’s more, this private backing is new investment coming into Greater Manchester and the UK from North America and offers us both UK and international sales opportunities for our GelPonic products.“
Richard Willett, an investor in Terra Sana, has taken a board position in AEH along with Professor Robert Field, Director of the Manchester Institute of Biotechnology, at The University of Manchester, who will sit on the technical advisory board.
Richard said: “We are delighted to invest in AEH with Beenish as the visionary behind the company. This international partnership will open new overseas market opportunities, including the fast-growing North American market, where Terra Sana has strong links and already established orders. The AEH gel offers significant opportunities in improving soil in impoverished regions and we see enormous potential in the North American vertical farming market that is forecast to reach over $6,500 million by 2028.”