GigaCrop
GigaCrop is a technology company.
Financial History
GigaCrop has raised $5.0M across 1 funding round.
Frequently Asked Questions
How much funding has GigaCrop raised?
GigaCrop has raised $5.0M in total across 1 funding round.
GigaCrop is a technology company.
GigaCrop has raised $5.0M across 1 funding round.
GigaCrop has raised $5.0M in total across 1 funding round.
GigaCrop is a plant biology startup engineering seeds to double crop yields by reinventing photosynthesis, targeting major crops like corn and soybean to boost food security, fiber, and fuel production.[1][2][3][5] The company serves farmers and the agricultural sector by solving inefficiencies in natural photosynthesis—specifically bypassing the slow rubisco enzyme with a novel, faster carbon fixation pathway using just four genes, enabling more efficient CO2 conversion into sugars and seeds without extra land, water, or fertilizer.[2][3][4][5] Founded by scientist-entrepreneur Chris Eiben, GigaCrop has raised $4.5 million in venture funding from Playground Global and Juniper Ventures, plus over $2.7 million in grants from ARPA-E, U.S. DOE, and the Grantham Foundation, positioning it for rapid scaling in the $24 billion transgenic seed market.[1][2][4]
GigaCrop traces its roots to a high school AP Biology class thought by founder Chris Eiben: "If everything we used came from plants, the world would be sustainable by default."[3] Eiben, who earned a PhD in Bioengineering from UC Berkeley in Jay Keasling's lab focusing on synthetic metabolism and protein engineering, refined this into a startup after a postdoc and entrepreneurial fellowship.[1][3] The pivotal insight—bypassing rubisco's bottleneck in photosynthesis—emerged from his deep expertise, leading to GigaCrop's novel carbon fixation pathway with higher flux than the native Calvin Benson cycle.[2][3][4] Early traction includes seed funding from Playground Global, which hailed it as "agriculture's biggest breakthrough in a century," and grants validating the tech's potential to disrupt crop yields.[1][4] Today, the team includes operations leader Mike Mann, with 30+ years in plant biotech, bridging science and execution.[3]
GigaCrop rides the wave of synthetic biology and climate-agritech, addressing global food security amid population growth and arable land limits by unlocking "inaccessible" yields through faster photosynthesis.[2][3][5] Timing is ideal: rising demand for sustainable bio-manufacturing (food, fiber, fuel) aligns with falling gene-editing costs and policy support like ARPA-E grants, amid market forces like fertilizer shortages and carbon reduction mandates.[1][4] By enabling plants to produce more with less, it influences the ecosystem—empowering farmers' profits, enhancing resilience, and shrinking agriculture's carbon footprint, potentially redefining the $24B seed industry and supporting a "plant-powered" sustainable economy.[2][4][5]
GigaCrop is poised to deliver field trials and commercial seeds for corn/soybean within years, expanding to biomanufacturing crops as synthetic biology scales.[3][5] Trends like AI-accelerated protein design and climate-adaptive ag will amplify its edge, potentially doubling global harvests and slashing emissions. Its influence could evolve from niche innovator to agtech cornerstone, powering a resilient world—echoing Eiben's vision of sustainability through bountiful plants.[3][4]
GigaCrop has raised $5.0M in total across 1 funding round.
GigaCrop's investors include Boehringer Ingelheim Venture Fund, Playground Global, Y Combinator.
GigaCrop has raised $5.0M across 1 funding round. Most recently, it raised $5.0M Seed in March 2025.
| Date | Round | Lead Investors | Other Investors |
|---|---|---|---|
| Mar 1, 2025 | $5.0M Seed | Boehringer Ingelheim Venture Fund, Playground Global, Y Combinator |