Glossary · Vocabulary

Biotech rose

Biotech rose names a rose smelling material obtained by precision fermentation rather than by floral extraction. The goal is to ease pressure on Damascena rose farming, which is hungry for land and water, without losing the trail of the flower.

Definition

Biotech rose describes a rose smelling raw material produced by precision fermentation or by cellular agriculture, as an alternative to classical extraction of Rosa damascena and Rosa centifolia. Engineered yeasts recreate the flower's biosynthetic pathways and release odor active molecules into the broth, which are then separated, purified and added to the perfumer's concentrate.

Origin and history

The founding partnership pairs Ginkgo Bioworks with Robertet, announced in November 2015 around designer yeasts engineered to produce rose smelling ingredients (source: Ginkgo Bioworks). In May 2017 the two groups reported a successful commercial scale fermentation, in a 50,000 liter reactor. In April 2024, Robertet and Italian biotech firm Aethera Biotech presented a new patented rose extract at InCosmetics Global in Paris.

Use in perfumery

Biotech rose tends to complement classical absolutes and essences, rarely to replace them outright. It sits inside the wider family of biotechnology derived materials in perfumery, alongside Ambrofix, an ambroxide produced by sugar cane fermentation at Givaudan (source: Givaudan). The main argument behind these materials is lower pressure on rose farming, which consumes large amounts of land, water and labor.

Sources

Published 4 June 2026 · Updated 4 June 2026 · Last fact check: 4 June 2026 · The Osmetheca Editorial Team