Imagine a world where butter is made not from cows, but from thin air—literally. This tantalizing idea is becoming a reality thanks to Savor, a California startup founded in 2022 and backed by none other than Bill Gates. Instead of relying on traditional dairy farming, Savor captures carbon dioxide from the atmosphere and hydrogen from water to concoct a butter alternative that’s not just innovative but also sustainable.
Using a patented thermochemical process, Savor combines these elements to create fat-like carbon-hydrogen chains that mimic the structure of dairy fats. It’s like a culinary magician pulling delightful and creamy butter out of a hat—except the hat is the entire planet!
Savor’s pilot facility in Illinois is ready to churn out tons of this animal-free fat, paving the way for possibilities beyond butter, like milk, cheese, and even ice cream. This aligns with their vision of expanding into other animal-derived products in the future. With an initial production capacity to produce metric tons of fat starting this year, Savor is poised for significant impact in the food industry.
What sets Savor apart is its revolutionary approach to food production. There’s no need for farmland, fertilizers, or antibiotics. In fact, their method requires less than 0.1% of the water used in conventional butter production.
A standard stick of butter has a carbon footprint that could make a polar bear shed a tear—16.9 kg CO2 equivalent per kilogram. In stark contrast, Savor’s alternative emits less than 0.8 grams CO2 equivalent per kilogram. Talk about a game changer!
Taste tests reveal that Savor’s butter is nearly indistinguishable from the real deal. Bill Gates himself has praised its flavor, highlighting that it’s chemically identical to traditional butter.
For consumers worried about lab-grown foods (who wouldn’t be?), Savor promises a delicious alternative that performs beautifully in baking and cooking. Unlike conventional dairy production that often depletes soil health, Savor’s air-to-butter technology represents a step toward more sustainable food systems that can feed future generations.