SMC_Application2026_1080x810_02

MassChallenge Switzerland is inviting startups to apply to the MassChallenge Sustainable Materials Challenge 2026, seeking solutions to tackle issues such as greenhouse gas emissions and waste and provide companies with support and resources. The company explains more in this edition of The Spotlight.

In a world where materials production and waste are responsible for about one-third of global greenhouse gas emissions, tackling this challenge is fundamental to achieving a more sustainable future. The MassChallenge Sustainable Materials Challenge 2026 opens a powerful platform for startups to break into this space — with the support, resources, and market access needed to scale.

A bridge between innovators and industry leaders

This isn’t a typical contest. It’s a match-making contest connecting cutting-edge materials startups with eight major corporate partners including Bühler, Givaudan, Mars, Omya, dsm-firmenich, Louis Dreyfus Company, Tate & Lyle, and SIG. These partners span the full materials value chain — from sourcing and production to processing and end-use — and are actively seeking innovations in areas such as circular and bio-based materials, advanced recycling technologies, sidestream valorisation, functional packaging, green chemistry, and carbon-negative construction solutions.

What makes this challenge especially powerful is that many materials innovations stall not for lack of ingenuity, but through lack of access: access to manufacturing infrastructure, industry relationships, pilot opportunities, and credible demand. MassChallenge’s partners bring precisely these avenues to the table. Startups that fit partner needs may be fast-tracked into 1:1 meetings, pilot programs, and co-development agreements — with zero obligation to proceed unless both parties are aligned.

GTF Technologies and Givaudan, Grand Winners 2025

GTF Technologies and Givaudan, Grand Winners 2025

Why this matters for startups

Participation in this challenge offers startups:

  • Direct access to decision-makers: Whether R&D heads, open innovation leaders, sustainability teams, or business unit managers, startups get to present their solutions to the people who can make them real.
  • Pilot and scaling potential: Selected startups may enter into pilots or collaborations to validate and scale their technologies within corporate settings.
  • Public exposure and connections: The top startups will pitch at the Sustainable Materials Challenge Day in mid-2026, gaining visibility among all partners, media, and the broader ecosystem. A travel stipend of CHF 1,000 helps cover participation costs.
  • No equity or strings attached: Startups retain full control. Any collaboration or investment happens only when mutually agreed.

Sustainable Food Challenge Final 2025, MassChallenge Office, Renens (CH)

Who should apply?

The Challenge is open to startups and scaleups at prototype level or higher (TRL 5+) with solutions that are impactful, scalable, and viable. Whether you’re innovating with bio-polymers, textile or plastic recycling, sidestream valorisation, sustainable packaging coatings, or carbon-negative building materials — this is your chance. Startups from any geography are welcome, though European presence may ease collaboration.

A key advantage is that this edition of MassChallenge’s materials/innovation-focused challenges is building on a robust track record of linking 250+ startups with industry leaders (especially in food and materials).

Sustainable Food Challenge Jury_Final 2025

How to get involved

  • 🗓 Deadline to apply: November 17, 2025, 23:59 CET
  • 🖥 Info Webinar: November 6, 16:00 CET
  • 📍 Next steps: Shortlisted startups will be invited for 1:1 calls with partners, followed by opportunities to pilot or co-develop solutions.
  • 👉 Want to jump in? Apply now at: Sustainable Materials Challenge 2026

Innovation in materials isn’t just about lab breakthroughs — it’s about real-world adoption. This challenge brings startups one step closer to scalable impact, backed by the power of partners committed to change.

This content was sponsored by MassChallenge.