Sporo transforms urban waste streams —such as spent coffee grounds, brewer’s spent grain, wood, pruning waste, and old bread— into valuable resources through the power of fungi. Using an innovative sterilization process, these waste streams are converted into high-quality substrates for growing a variety of edible and functional mushrooms. By harnessing local urban waste, Sporo upcycles it into fungi-based proteins, giving these valuable resources a fresh start.
Sporo has been a pioneer in the valorization of urban waste streams, particularly coffee grounds, for sustainable mushroom cultivation. With a strong focus on circularity and a decade of experience, the company has refined the process of turning waste into a high-quality growing medium. By mixing coffee grounds with other local ingredients and sterilizing them, they are creating a sustainable and circular solution for mushroom production. Sporo is now scaling its efforts to close the loop locally and reduce reliance on linear supply chains. Sporo was initiated by the founder and operations manager of rotterzwam Rotterzwam has more than 10 years of experience in growing mushrooms from spent coffee grounds.
Each year, approximately 60,000 tons of coffee grounds are generated across offices, restaurants, and factories in the Netherlands. While some of this residual stream is separated for collection, most are still incinerated, digested, or composted rather than being processed into high-value applications. This represents a significant missed opportunity for circular solutions. Furthermore, despite increasing interest in mushrooms cultivated on urban residual streams like coffee grounds, production remains small-scale and labor-intensive, limiting its economic viability. Additionally, most larger mushroom growers in the Netherlands rely on a single substrate supplier, which uses straw imported from Southern Europe. This dependency presents challenges related to sustainability, cost, and the increasing scarcity of high-quality straw due to climate change.
Sporo aims to address these gaps and wants to further scale its operations, create a circular system, and minimize reliance on non-local, linear supply chains for substrate production.
12.12.2024
Process design and technology decisions can make or break your scale-up journey. Last week, Circular Factory Program participants dived deep into the technicalities of optimizing processes while planning for scalability.
4.12.2024
The Circular Factory Program’s third edition is well underway to empower five circular entrepreneurs as they scale toward opening their first demo plants. Last week, our cohort dove into the Feedstock pillar, a cornerstone of the journey to scaling a circular factory. Participants explored the complexities of feedstock sourcing, quality, and regulatory challenges through a blend of expert-led sessions and a site visit to PeelPioneers, a leading circular innovator.
Read more