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Oxford herbicide spinout Moa seeds $40m funding roundqrcode

Dec. 27, 2024

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Dec. 27, 2024

MoA Technology
United Kingdom  United Kingdom
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By Mark Kleinman


An Oxford University spinout which is developing a new generation of weed-resistant herbicides has begun planting a $40m (£32m) fundraising with prospective backers.


Sky News understands that Moa Technology, which was co-founded by the world-leading university's head of plant sciences Professor Liam Dolan, is kicking off a Series C funding round.


Moa has already raised $59m (£47m) from prominent investors including Oxford Science Enterprises (OSE), BGF and Lansdowne Partners, the Mayfair-based hedge fund.


Its existing shareholders are understood to be supportive of the new fundraising plans, although potential new investors will also be approached.


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Micro weeds being propagated for testing in Moa Technologys Oxford laboratories. Pic: Moa


Moa is developing active ingredients which can break weeds' resistance to herbicides - a key challenge for the global agricultural sector - with the aim of securing approval from regulators.


Similar to the growth of antibiotic resistance in humans, resistant 'superweeds' are able to kill a farmer's entire crop, ultimately endangering food security.


Industry data suggests that farmers spend up to $40bn (£31.2bn) annually on herbicides, and a further $25bn (£19.9bn) on weed-resistant seeds.


However, a number of leading weedkillers, including Bayer-owned Roundup, have sparked multibillion dollar lawsuits over their alleged implications for human health.


Moa has developed more than 70 so-called 'modes of action', with several of the company's products in advanced field trials in six countries, including the UK, US and France.


According to Moa, these could, assuming they gain regulatory approval, be commercially available by the end of the decade.


The OSE-backed spinout has a commercial agreement with Nufarm, an Australian agrichemicals company, to further develop one of its products.


A Moa spokesman said it intended to operate a royalties model similar to that of ARM Holdings, the chip designer, in semiconductors, meaning it will focus on research and development, and license its products to global manufacturers and distributors.


The company is run by chief executive Dr Virginia Corless, who has had extensive experience commercialising sustainable solutions in the energy, water and agriculture sectors.


An update on Moa's fundraising progress is likely in the first half of next year.


Source: Sky News

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