Bezos Earth Fund Pours $34 Million Into Lab-Grown Fibers to Revolutionize Fashion
Jeff Bezos and Lauren Sánchez Bezos are betting big on a future where clothes are grown in labs—not from cotton or polyester. The Bezos Earth Fund has committed $34 million to researchers developing next-generation textiles, including biodegradable fibers and plastic-free synthetic silk, aiming to slash the fashion industry's massive environmental footprint.
The investment marks a pivot for the fund, which has largely focused on conservation since Bezos pledged $10 billion to climate initiatives in 2020. Now, fashion—an industry deeply reliant on fossil fuels and a major carbon emitter—is in its crosshairs.
Key Facts
- $34 million grant from Bezos Earth Fund and Lauren Sánchez Bezos to develop lab-grown fibers.
- Target materials: biodegradable fibers, plastic-free silk, alternatives to cotton and polyester.
- Fashion industry is one of the largest contributors to global emissions, heavily reliant on fossil fuels.
- Fund recipients: Columbia University (with Fashion Institute of Technology), UC Berkeley, Clemson University, and the Cotton Foundation.
“The use of fossil fuels in the fashion industry is a big issue,” Tom Taylor, the fund’s president and CEO, told The Wall Street Journal. “We need to rethink what clothes are made from at the molecular level.”

Today’s dominant materials—polyester, viscose—are petroleum-based. They are cheap, durable, and ubiquitous, but they shed microplastics, release forever chemicals, and persist in landfills for centuries. The European Environment Agency has flagged growing health concerns.
“When you start asking questions about what clothes could be made of, the answers are incredible,” Lauren Sánchez Bezos said in a statement. “The future of fashion is being invented right now.”
Background
Bezos launched the Earth Fund in 2020 with a $10 billion pledge focused on conservation and nature-based solutions. This $34 million fashion grant represents one of its first major forays into industrial materials.
Researchers at Columbia University are developing a biodegradable fiber grown from bacteria that feed on agricultural waste. This method could reduce reliance on oil and water-intensive crops like cotton. Other teams are experimenting with plastic-free silks and fibers from unconventional sources.
But the challenge isn't just science. Sustainable textiles remain expensive, and many startups have failed to scale. Brands and consumers often revert to cheaper familiar fabrics, as Vogue has reported.
“It’s small, underfunded, and lacks those industry relationships that could push it further and deeper,” Steven Kolb, CEO of the Council of Fashion Designers of America, told The Wall Street Journal. The fund aims to close that gap.
What This Means
If successful, these lab-grown fibers could replace billions of tons of petroleum-based polyester and water-intensive cotton annually. The fashion industry accounts for roughly 10% of global carbon emissions, and textile production is a major source of microplastic pollution.
However, scaling remains the critical hurdle. Even with Bezos's money, these materials must prove cost-competitive and durable enough for mass adoption. The fund is betting that strategic grants and industry partnerships can force a tipping point.
For now, Bezos and Sánchez are sending a signal: the world's richest man sees a future where your shirt is grown from bacteria, not drilled from oil. And he's putting real money behind it.
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