Innovator developing sustainable biopolymers from waste. Founder mango-based material and bring global experience in engineering, research, and circular design.
AAMATI Green Private Limited is a pioneering biomaterials company developing next-generation sustainable materials from agricultural waste. The company’s patented mango-based biopolymer leather is India’s first plant-based alternative designed to match the performance, aesthetics, and durability demanded by international fashion, accessories, and upholstery markets. The technology converts discarded mango pulp and biomass into a high-value material through an advanced biopolymer matrix and engineered coating system. This approach solves two critical challenges: reducing agricultural waste at source and providing an eco-friendly alternative to animal leather and fossil-fuel-based synthetics. Developed through rigorous R&D and scientific collaboration with India’s premier research institutions, the material demonstrates significant improvements in tensile strength, flexibility, moisture resistance, and long-term durability. AAMATI’s innovation positions it alongside global leaders in sustainable materials while representing India on the world stage. The company works closely with designers, chemical specialists, and finishing experts to create scalable, commercially viable solutions for the circular economy. With growing interest from European luxury brands, AAMATI is now expanding toward larger production volumes and deeper global partnerships. AAMATI’s mission is to build the future of regenerative materials—combining biotechnology, engineering, and circular design to create sustainable alternatives that are good for the planet, farmers, and next-generation industries.
I’m building plant-based materials that challenge both petro-leathers and status quos. No animals, no plastic—just science, storytelling, and sustainability stitched together. I believe the future belongs to curious minds and courageous builders. The revolution won’t be synthetic—it’ll be biodegradable.
I’ve always believed intelligence isn’t about knowing the answer—it’s about questioning the premise. That belief took me from mechanical engineering to journalism in Ukraine, an MBA in Paris, and aircraft systems at Airbus. I’ve hosted Debates, built mechanical prototypes, and learned business ideas across continents. Now, I’m turning mango waste into premium, planet-positive leather at Aamati Green. My obsession? Designing systems where sustainability is the default, not the compromise. I thrive at the intersection of science, culture, and climate innovation. If you think curiosity should power industries—and waste can be beautiful—then we’re probably already on the same wavelength.