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Joel Eichmann: Making cell biology efficient and sustainable

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Manage episode 417959872 series 3556156
Content provided by Mark Davison. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Mark Davison or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://player.fm/legal.

It is a guilty secret that the pharma and biotech industry has a big carbon footprint. Single-use plastics are a huge problem. Sensitive experiments need clean, sterile labware. This has often meant using virgin plastic with little or no recycling or reuse. Innovative approaches are needed to reduce plastic consumption in the lab.
How bad is bad? On average, cell biologists produce several kg of plastic waste, each, per day. These include pipettes, plastic trays for cell growth, various wrappers, membranes, packaging, etc. Formats and workflows have changed, as some tasks have been automated for robots, but the plastic products used in those processes haven't changed much in decades. The world can't keep making and incinerating single-use plastics, even for medical research.
In this episode I am joined by someone who is looking for a better way, Dr Joel Eichmann, CEO and co-founder of Green Elephant Biotech. How can cell growth yields be improved by better growth vessel design, so that you can grow more cells with less plastic? How can fossil fuel use be minimised by using plant-derived plastics for the labware? Can we combine those approaches for a double win?

How to turn these technical ideas into a growing, sustainable business that provides meaningful jobs and profits?
We discuss all these challenges and more.

“We can generate a carbon footprint reduction of about 90%” – Joel Eichmann

You’ll hear about:

01:56 – How Joel got to where he is today

03:59 – The core question Joel was asking

06:17 – Figuring out how to do things differently

10:28 – Getting from the idea to the company

16:06 – The benefits of using plant based materials

24:31 – The traction Joel is getting with scientists

28:09 – The life cycle of the products

30:43 – The next stage of the business

Follow Joel:

LinkedIn - https://www.linkedin.com/in/joel-eichmann/

Green Elephant Biotech - https://www.greenelephantbiotech.com/

Connect with Me:
LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/markdavison100/

Grant Instruments: https://www.grantinstruments.com/

Grant Instruments on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/grant-instruments-cambridge-ltd/

  continue reading

Chapters

1. How Joel got to where he is today (00:01:56)

2. The core question Joel was asking (00:03:59)

3. Figuring out how to do things differently (00:06:17)

4. Getting from the idea to the company (00:10:28)

5. The benefits of using plant based materials (00:16:06)

6. The traction Joel is getting with scientists (00:24:31)

7. The life cycle of the products (00:28:09)

8. The next stage of the business (00:30:43)

8 episodes

Artwork
iconShare
 
Manage episode 417959872 series 3556156
Content provided by Mark Davison. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Mark Davison or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://player.fm/legal.

It is a guilty secret that the pharma and biotech industry has a big carbon footprint. Single-use plastics are a huge problem. Sensitive experiments need clean, sterile labware. This has often meant using virgin plastic with little or no recycling or reuse. Innovative approaches are needed to reduce plastic consumption in the lab.
How bad is bad? On average, cell biologists produce several kg of plastic waste, each, per day. These include pipettes, plastic trays for cell growth, various wrappers, membranes, packaging, etc. Formats and workflows have changed, as some tasks have been automated for robots, but the plastic products used in those processes haven't changed much in decades. The world can't keep making and incinerating single-use plastics, even for medical research.
In this episode I am joined by someone who is looking for a better way, Dr Joel Eichmann, CEO and co-founder of Green Elephant Biotech. How can cell growth yields be improved by better growth vessel design, so that you can grow more cells with less plastic? How can fossil fuel use be minimised by using plant-derived plastics for the labware? Can we combine those approaches for a double win?

How to turn these technical ideas into a growing, sustainable business that provides meaningful jobs and profits?
We discuss all these challenges and more.

“We can generate a carbon footprint reduction of about 90%” – Joel Eichmann

You’ll hear about:

01:56 – How Joel got to where he is today

03:59 – The core question Joel was asking

06:17 – Figuring out how to do things differently

10:28 – Getting from the idea to the company

16:06 – The benefits of using plant based materials

24:31 – The traction Joel is getting with scientists

28:09 – The life cycle of the products

30:43 – The next stage of the business

Follow Joel:

LinkedIn - https://www.linkedin.com/in/joel-eichmann/

Green Elephant Biotech - https://www.greenelephantbiotech.com/

Connect with Me:
LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/markdavison100/

Grant Instruments: https://www.grantinstruments.com/

Grant Instruments on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/grant-instruments-cambridge-ltd/

  continue reading

Chapters

1. How Joel got to where he is today (00:01:56)

2. The core question Joel was asking (00:03:59)

3. Figuring out how to do things differently (00:06:17)

4. Getting from the idea to the company (00:10:28)

5. The benefits of using plant based materials (00:16:06)

6. The traction Joel is getting with scientists (00:24:31)

7. The life cycle of the products (00:28:09)

8. The next stage of the business (00:30:43)

8 episodes

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