Wanda Fish: $7 Million Closed To Grow Fish Filets Using Cell-Cultivation Practices

By Dan Anderson • Oct 13, 2023

FoodTech start-up Wanda Fish Technologies, Ltd. recently announced it has secured $7 million in seed funding. This funding round was led by Netherlands-based global aquaculture investment fund Aqua-Spark, with additional funding from returning pre-seed investors The Kitchen Hub by the Strauss Group, Peregrine Ventures, LLC, PICO Venture Partners, MOREVC, and CPT Capital, LLP. Since its inception, Wanda Fish has raised $10 million in funding.

Launched in 2021 by The Kitchen Hub and Daphna Heffetz, a leading figure in biotechnology-based innovation, Wanda Fish develops premium quality, cultivated fish outside of the ocean. And this new funding round will boost Wanda Fish’s ability to accelerate the creation and increase the scale of a cultivated whole-cut filet of bluefin tuna.

The cuts replicate the texture, flavor, and nutritional value of wild-caught bluefin tuna as they comprise the fish’s muscle and fat cells and contain the same native proteins and fatty acids, including omega-3 and other essential nutrients. And as a cultivated filet, Wanda Fish’s bluefin tuna has no common ocean pollutants, such as mercury, and is produced under non-GMO standards.

Valued for its nutritional content, texture, and flavor, bluefin tuna is known as an expensive and sought-after species that is particularly popular with high-end sushi restaurants due to its perfect balance of fat and protein. Also driving demand is bluefin tuna’s inaccessibility. 

Overfishing of bluefin tuna pushed it to the brink of endangerment, leading governments to significantly limit fishing quotas. And tuna is considered unsustainable to farm due to the feed resources, pen size requirements, and difficulty of breeding in captivity. Plus, tuna is one of the oceans’ most polluted fish – often contaminated with plastic debris and extremely high levels of heavy metals, intensifying the need for an accessible, stable supply of sustainable alternatives.

Wanda Fish made rapid progress on key developmental breakthroughs toward achieving a whole-cut bluefin tuna prototype to provide an abundant and premium source of highly nutritious fish that will alleviate strain on the delicate ocean ecosystem. And this includes forming a 3D filet structure using bluefin tuna cells and differentiated into both muscle and fat tissues. Through a proprietary technique, Wanda Fish can precisely control fat levels in its end products. This enables the creation of a diverse range of filet cuts, including the highly sought-after Toro premium cut.

KEY QUOTES:

“We are excited and feel incredibly fortunate to collaborate with Aqua-Spark in propelling our venture forward. We are on a shared mission to improve the global food value chain, creating a tasty, more sustainable future for all. This financial backing by leading global venture funds gives us significant leverage to make sustainably cultivated, cruelty-free, and ocean-friendly bluefin tuna a reality.”

  • Daphna Heffetz, Ph.D., co-founder and CEO of Wanda Fish

“In such a burgeoning and innovative sector, we are pleased to welcome Wanda Fish into our portfolio of companies based on the remarkable speed with which they’ve met significant milestones. We firmly believe in a future where sustainably farmed and cultivated seafood will work in concert with one another to alleviate the burden of overfishing, especially species like bluefin tuna which are deemed unsustainable to farm.”

  • Lissy Smit, CEO of Aqua-Spark

“As the start-up’s incubator, we’ve had the privilege of witnessing the immense progress Wanda Fish has made since their inception less than two years ago. Wanda Fish is transforming visionary ideas into a tangible, cutting-edge product that is just steps away from reaching its prototype. This is credited to a skilled and ambitious multinational team led by Daphna Heffetz that is undoubtedly poised for a resounding success story in the thriving alternative protein space; this spells good news for an overburdened marine ecosystem.”

  • Jonathan Berger, CEO of The Kitchen FoodTech Hub