Israel will establish its first bio-devices and bio-chips laboratory with a landmark $30 million (113 million Shekels) investment, the Israel Innovation Authority announced. Led by Israel Aerospace Industries (IAI) and Baccaramos Technologies, this initiative aims to position Israel as a leader in global innovation. The lab will focus on developing advanced technologies such as intelligent medical implants, smart environmental sensors, and bio-based energy solutions. By integrating biology, engineering, and artificial intelligence, the facility will serve as a key driver of growth for Israel’s biotech sector, providing unparalleled R&D services to foster innovation across various industries.
The Israel Innovation Authority is investing $20 million (75 million Shekels) in the project.
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“This is a strategic breakthrough aimed at placing Israel at the heart of the global technological landscape,” the Israel Innovation Authority said. “The new laboratory will provide unique R&D services across numerous sectors, enabling Israeli researchers and companies to compete internationally, and will also serve as a significant growth engine for Israel’s local bio-tech industry.
“The National Laboratory for Biochips and Bio-Devices reflects our commitment and understanding that emerging technologies integrating leading disciplines drive breakthroughs in capabilities and achievements,” said Alon Stopel, Ph.D., Chairman of the Israel Innovation Authority. “The unique synergy between research and development in biology, engineering, and artificial intelligence will enable Israel to lead in developing creative solutions to global challenges, leveraging bio-convergence as a tool to enhance the capabilities of local academia and industry.”
Stopel also stressed that the new laboratory is “not merely a technological project—it is a milestone on the path to building a future of groundbreaking innovation with impact on both national and international levels.”
Dror Bin, CEO of the Israel Innovation Authority, added that the initiative will “solidify Israel’s global standing,” establishing Israel as “a global leader in the field.”
The lab is expected to serve as a hub of knowledge, research, and development, attracting foreign investment, fostering international collaborations, and drawing top talent to Israel.
While primarily associated with healthcare, bio-devices are now demonstrating utility across energy, environment, water, agriculture, and security sectors. For example, bio-devices that generate electricity from biological processes make it easier and cheaper to produce power from waste. Devices can release bacteria that break down organic materials via cellular respiration, simultaneously purifying contaminated water and generating electricity.
Following a rigorous selection process, the partnership between Israel Aerospace Industries and Baccaramos Technologies was chosen to lead the establishment of the lab.
Baccaramos Technologies, based in Caesarea and established in 1998, provides advanced packaging solutions for chips and optical components. In addition to the extensive and proven experience of IAI and Baccaramos in the field of technology and engineering, the collaboration will also leverage the expertise of domestic and international partners in biology including Fraunhofer IGB and Ginkgo Bioworks, as well as NVIDIA in the field of computing and AI, NY CREATES in the field of chip manufacturing, and others.
A Game-Changing Laboratory
The bio-chip and bio-device lab will offer Israeli companies access to world-class technological infrastructure and advanced R&D services, including prototyping, small-scale production, and validation. The technologies developed in the lab are expected to accelerate drug development, diagnostics and monitoring, and to make biological production processes cheaper, more exact, and more accessible.Bio-chips and bio-devices serve as essential tools to revolutionize diagnostics, detection, and monitoring across humans, animals, plants, water, air, and soil. The ability to manipulate individual cells within a bio-chip (using a process known as microfluidics) to perform biological processes in microscopic volumes and measure changes with molecular sensitivity through nanotechnology essentially “condenses” into a small chip what has, for decades, required large, expensive biological labs.
Bio-convergence integrates biological science with engineering, software, and computational technologies. This emerging field is poised grow rapidly and to transform fields such as medicine, environment, energy, agriculture, food, security, and more.
Examples of Potential Developments in the Lab:
Purifying Contaminated Water: Smart devices combining advanced bacteria to clean water while generating electrical energy through cellular respiration.
Air Pollution Monitoring: Bio-chips detecting molecular-level toxins in real-time, enabling urban and industrial air restoration.
Marine Environmental Restoration: Biological devices breaking down organic and plastic waste in oceans, purifying water, and generating energy.
Rapid Infectious Disease Diagnosis: Smart chips diagnosing viral or bacterial diseases within minutes from small samples, providing immediate, personalized treatment recommendations.
Autonomous Biological Security Systems: Devices detecting explosives or hazardous materials at border crossings with tailored neutralizing responses.
Smart Food Production: Biological technologies enabling sustainable food growth in harsh conditions while minimizing waste and preserving nutritional value.
Toxic Material Cleanup: Sensors designed to identify and rehabilitate areas contaminated by toxic substances in water or soil through precise biological reactions.
Early Public Health Monitoring: Urban sensors detecting early outbreaks of infectious diseases and preventing epidemics.