Heatless technique does the same job as pasteurisation, but keeps key protein intact

Pasteurisation is an important part of the process of making milk safe for consumption, as otherwise, according to the UK’s Food Standards Agency, the risk to human health is significant.

But what if the same job could be done without the heat, making for a less energy-intensive process? Danish company Lyras uses UV light to remove bacteria from milk without heat being needed at all. Initially called ‘cold pasteurisation’, the process has been rechristened ‘raslysation’, a combination of the first three letters in the name of the company’s founder, Rasmus Mortensen, and the Danish word ‘lys’, meaning light.

The process, predicts the company, has the potential to save 60-80% water use and 60-90% energy use compared to pasteurisation. Because it is less energy-intensive than pasteurisation, it is, the company suggested, both more sustainable and cost-saving by comparison.

How the technology works

Raslysation uses ‘germicidal’ UV light to alter the DNA of microorganisms in order to prevent them from reproducing, Mark Kalhøj Andersen, Lyras’ new CEO, told FoodNavigator.

The antibacterial potential of UV light has been known about for a long time, although it was previously used only for transparent liquids like water. Normally, it cannot reach very far into opaque liquids such as milk, only getting 0.1 millimetres through it.

Origins of pasteurisation

Named after the French scientist Louis Pasteur, who in the 1860s realised that abnormal fermentation could be prevented in beer and wine by heating it, the prospect of using pasteurisation in dairy was first suggested by German chemist Frans von Soxhlet in 1886.