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Bayer expands investment to acquire majority share in CoverCress

Bayer expands investment to acquire majority share in CoverCress
The new CoverCress cash crop has the potential to decrease nitrogen loss, help store carbon in the soil, and improve soil health while providing an oilseed suitable as a biofuel feedstock, and animal protein (photo courtesy Bayer).

Germany-headed global life sciences major Bayer AG, US-headed global oilseeds processing major Bunge Ltd, and compatriot Chevron U.S.A. Inc. (Chevron), a subsidiary of global energy major Chevron Corporation, have signed a shareholders’ agreement in connection with Bayer’s acquisition of a 65 percent majority ownership of the winter oilseed producer CoverCress, Inc., (CCI).

The remaining 35 percent of CCI will continue ownership under Bunge and Chevron.

CCI has been a portfolio company of Leaps by Bayer, the impact investment arm of Bayer for the past seven years.

CoverCress is a rotational cash crop that combines grain production with the environmental benefits of a cover crop without displacing other harvests.

CoverCress is exciting because it has the potential to become an important source for biofuel production as a new harvested rotational crop while giving growers an innovative option to continue effective stewardship of their land and improve soil quality by acting as a cover crop, said Rodrigo Santos, Member of the Board of Management of Bayer AG and President of the Crop Science Division.

Biofuel feedstock and high-protein meal

Oil extracted from CoverCress grain is designed to achieve a lower carbon intensity score and can be made into renewable diesel with Bunge’s expertise in oilseed processing and Chevron’s proficiency in fuel manufacturing.

This farm-to-fuel supply chain represented by CCI, Bayer, Bunge, and Chevron aims to give corn and soybean growers another revenue outlet by providing the world with a desirable fuel product and high-protein meal for animal feed.

 As a global leader in crop science, we are committed to decarbonizing agriculture and helping farmers around the world become more sustainable through game-changing products and solutions that can impact climate change. This investment and collaboration between industry leaders is another proof point for our efforts, Rodrigo Santos said.

Develop and commercialize CoverCress

Aligning the combined expertise of Bayer, Bunge, and Chevron with the potential held by CoverCress will position CCI to further develop and commercialize its namesake winter oilseed into a rotational cash cover crop with potential sustainability and carbon sequestration benefits and bring a new lower carbon fuel feedstock to the renewable diesel industry.

CCI, which will continue to operate as an independent entity, has developed CoverCress as a unique crop whose grain is a lower carbon, low-input source for fuel and feed.

Since our founding in 2013, we have actively sought – and benefited from – scientific, operational, and financial support from our academic and strategic partners. The progress we have made in converting pennycress into our novel, lower carbon-intensity oilseed technology, CoverCress, would have been much slower without this critical support. Our long-standing strategic partnership with Bayer and our more recent strategic partnerships with Bunge, and Chevron have provided us with access to expertise and capital that positions CCI very well for future success, said Mike DeCamp, President and CEO of CCI.

By leveraging expertise and backing from leaders in fuels, soybean crushing, logistics, and crop sciences, CCI will be positioned to deliver on its full potential via a supply chain that understands its crop’s production, growth, processing, and delivery needs from the ground up.

Connecting the full value chain – from seed development to end consumer – is an important step to bringing this crop to market at scale. We look forward to helping meet the growing demand for renewable fuels with this next generation lower carbon feedstock, said Greg Heckman, CEO of Bunge.

Low-input rotational cash crop

Growers in North America will soon gain access to this cash crop that provides the benefits of a cover crop as well as being harvestable for use as a renewable fuel feedstock.

Farmers plant traditional cover crops to protect and improve their soil, not to harvest. Developed by converting field pennycress through breeding and gene editing tools, CoverCress is a new low-input rotational cash crop that has the ecosystem benefits of a cover crop.

When added to corn and soybean rotations on land during the winter, CoverCress has the potential to decrease nitrogen loss, help store carbon in the soil, and improve soil health.

Chevron is seeking to create innovative renewable fuel feedstocks by collaborating with America’s farmers. We are excited to work with Bayer and Bunge to accelerate the adoption of CoverCress, which we believe can ultimately be used to help supply the US transportation system with lower lifecycle carbon intensity fuels, said Mark Nelson, EVP of Downstream and Chemicals at Chevron.

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