- Impossible Foods is suing Motif FoodWorks for patent infringement.
- In its complaint, Impossible claims that Motif’s Hemami technology infringes on its patent for a beef replica that contains heme.
- Along with Beyond Meat, Impossible has helped rejuvenate the market for vegetarian burgers, and a host of other companies have jumped on the trend.
Impossible Foods is suing Motif FoodWorks for patent infringement, claiming that the start-up’s beef alternative that uses heme technology that too closely imitates its own version.
Both companies are privately owned, although Impossible is much larger, with a valuation of $9.5 billion.
Impossible’s beef and pork substitutes use soy leghemoglobin, which is produced from genetically modified yeast, to imitate the taste and aroma of real meat. Along with Beyond Meat, Impossible has helped rejuvenate the market for vegetarian burgers. Several other companies have jumped on the trend, ranging from industry giants to small start-ups.
Motif has raised $343.5 million from investors such as Bill Gates and was valued at $1.23 billion last year, according to Pitchbook. It was spun out of biotech start-up Ginkgo Bioworks. When Motif launched in 2019, Ginkgo co-founder and CEO Jason Kelly told CNBC that Impossible’s success inspired the formation of Motif, which develops key ingredients for making plant-based proteins and leaves the rest to food companies.
In December, Motif announced that its first new food technology Hemami would be commercially available to large-scale customers. The Food and Drug Administration had deemed the ingredient as “generally recognized as safe.”
In its complaint filed in federal court in Delaware on Wednesday, Impossible alleges that Motif’s Hemami infringes on its patent for a beef replica using heme as an ingredient. Motif’s version uses bovine myoglobin as its heme source and follows a similar process to create the ingredient, which can then be used in beef substitutes, according to court filings.
According to Impossible, its patent covers the invention of a beef substitute that uses a muscle replica including a heme-containing protein, at least one sugar compound and one sulfur compound. It also protects against the invention of a meat alternative that mimics meat through a fat tissue replica that uses at least one plant oil and a denatured plant protein.
“We applaud other companies’ efforts to develop compelling plant-based products, but we do not tolerate attempts to undermine our brand or products through the deliberate and unauthorized infringement of our intellectual property,” Impossible said in a statement to CNBC.
In a statement to CNBC, a Motif spokesperson said the company intends to contest the allegations “vigorously.”
“This complaint is not supported by facts or the law and is nothing more than a baseless attempt by Impossible Foods to stifle competition, limit consumer choice, and impede Motif, a new and innovative company with significant business momentum,” the spokesperson said in the statement.
Source: Business - cnbc.com