From Pollution to Designer Jacket? It's in the Microbe. cover art

From Pollution to Designer Jacket? It's in the Microbe.

From Pollution to Designer Jacket? It's in the Microbe.

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In this episode, Flo sits down with Dr. Michael Köpke, Chief Innovation Officer at LanzaTech, to explore how specialized microbes are literally eating industrial emissions and transforming them into valuable products (Michael's cool Jacket!). From sustainable aviation fuels to the jacket Michael is wearing—which started its life as emissions from a steel plant—LanzaTech's carbon-fixing microbes are closing the loop on our circular economy. Michael shares his journey from academic microbiology research to commercializing this breakthrough technology, and reveals how LanzaTech now operates six commercial plants globally, capturing half a million tons of CO2 annually while producing 300,000 tons of products. Discover how nature's zero-waste systems are inspiring the next generation of biomanufacturing and how waste gases are becoming the feedstock for a sustainable future.

Connect with Dr. Michael Kopke on X and Linkedin.

More about Michael and LanzaTech: Dr. Michael Köpke is the Chief Innovation Officer at LanzaTech ($LNZA), a global leader in carbon capture and sustainable fuels, chemicals, and materials production. Since joining the company in 2009, he has built up the company's biology platform and directs innovation strategy and technology partnerships.


Michael earned his Ph.D. in biotechnology from Ulm University and brings over two decades of international experience in synthetic biology and biomanufacturing. Widely recognized as a pioneer in carbon-fixing microbial technologies, Dr. Köpke holds more than 500 patents and received major honors such as the Presidential Green Chemistry Challenge Award, the ACS National Award for Team Innovation, and inclusion in The Bioeconomy 500.


Beyond his role at LanzaTech, Dr. Köpke is an adjunct professor at Northwestern University and serves on the boards of the Engineering Biology Research Consortium (EBRC) and the International Metabolic Engineering Society (IMES). Michael has led over 50 peer reviewed studies and development of community research roadmaps bringing together stakeholders from academia, industry, government and non-profits. Michael also chaired several international conferences and contributes in several editorial, education and advisory functions.

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