Brussels Startup Revolutionizes Eco-Friendly Packaging with Europe's First Myco-Materials Plant

November 13, 2025
Brussels Startup Revolutionizes Eco-Friendly Packaging with Europe's First Myco-Materials Plant
  • Permafungi’s growth plan includes collaborations with two wineries, a watch brand, and a candle maker, with a revenue target of 3 million euros within three years.

  • Local impact: Permafungi sits near a former factory site in Brussels, highlighting efforts to reindustrialize urban areas affected by closures and job losses.

  • Permafungi has secured about €2 million in EU and regional subsidies plus €1 million from private investor Après-Demain, with a goal of €3 million in revenue within three years and profitability in 2–5 years.

  • The Brussels plant’s location near a former Audi plant underscores urban industrial revitalization and a regional push toward circular economy initiatives.

  • Founder Jacques describes the process: waste materials like sawdust are inoculated with mycelium, which grows into a spongey, tofu-textured mass that is dried and shipped.

  • Permafungi, a Brussels-based startup, is developing fully biodegradable myco-materials as a sustainable alternative to petroleum-based packaging, beginning with custom packaging for premium soap makers and expanding into broader markets.

  • Experts note that while mushroom-based and biobased projects exist, scaling and cost are the main hurdles, though policy support and growing demand could accelerate adoption.

  • The company has opened Europe’s first mycomaterials plant to produce biodegradable packaging from fungi, targeting high-end hotels, soap brands, wineries, and other luxury labels as initial partners.

  • The company emphasizes an eco-friendly, local-sourcing model, using mushrooms from the Sonian forest, recycled rainwater, solar panels, and a timber bicycle shed at its new facility to reduce environmental impact.

  • The new facility marks a scale-up from a niche venture that previously produced edible mushrooms from coffee grounds, as Permafungi moves into conventional packaging and forms partnerships with vineyards, watch brands, and candle retailers.

  • The company aims to scale for broader packaging markets, leveraging EU and Swiss fund support, targeting profitability within 2–5 years amid competition and fossil-based substitute pressures.

  • The venture faces challenges such as cost, scaling, and competition from fossil-based plastics, but aligns with EU aims to make all packaging recyclable by 2030 and to promote bioeconomy strategies.

  • Policy context: the EU is pursuing a bioeconomy strategy to support biomaterials, with upcoming 2030 packaging recyclability mandates and rising packaging waste concerns in Europe.

Summary based on 2 sources


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