A future where clean, reliable nutrition is available everywhere
The mission of Eden Engine is to turn captured CO₂ into a stable, scalable source of food molecules. When nutrition is made from air, water and clean energy, hunger falls, ecosystems recover and new frontiers become possible.
Local nutrition everywhere
Clean sugar and core molecules made from CO₂ give communities a reliable base for calories, fermentation and bio manufacturing. Nutrition can be produced locally instead of depending on fragile global supply chains.
- Hunger removed at the source
- Resilient neighborhood and outpost food systems
- Essential calories within reach of every settlement
Earth rewilded and climate aligned
As food production shifts from farmland to carbon to food reactors, vast land areas can return to forests, grasslands and wetlands. Every kilogram of CO₂ processed is both a climate action and a nutrition gain.
- Large land areas restored to natural ecosystems
- Biodiversity and watershed health strengthened
- Food production becomes climate positive over time
Life supported beyond Earth
Closed loop nutrition is essential for long duration missions on the Moon, Mars and deep space. Eden Engine is designed to supply future off world life support systems where soil and agriculture cannot exist.
- Compact reactors for ships, stations and outposts
- Reliable molecular nutrition for exploration
- From scarcity to thoughtful abundance for multi planetary life
Grounded in real work today
The Eden Engine mission is backed by lab work, engineering and early prototypes. Our goal is to prove that turning captured carbon into reliable nutrition is not only possible, but stable and affordable enough to support people while giving land and ecosystems room to recover.
- Development of compact CO₂ to sugar microreactors
- Early fruit tissue growth module research underway
- Collaboration with researchers, engineers and industry partners
- Designed to work alongside farms and restored ecosystems
Interested in research collaborations or early field trials?
Request mission brief