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King Filip of Belgium visited High Tech Campus Eindhoven on Wednesday, on the concluding day of a three day visit to Holland. The conversation on campus seemed to come back to one word: collaboration, inside the country as well as across borders.

The King first arrived at the Conference Center at High Tech Campus Strip. Later, he was joined by Queen Mathilde upon visiting Holst Centre.

By Bob Munten e52.nl

Joint initiatives between Holland and Belgium took central stage on Wednesday. Where Holst originates from a collaboration between the Flamish IMEC and Dutch TNO, start-ups such as the Dutch ByFlow have started to partner with Belgium-based Callebaut.

ByFlow was part of the selected start-ups to actually meet and talk to the king during a meet & greet. Other parties that were invited to speak were Medtronic,Solar Team EindhovenAmber MobillityPhotonDelta and Team BlueJay.

3d-chocolate dessert
To ByFlow, an Eindhoven-based start-up which has produced a 3d-printer that is easy to pick up and transport, the royal visit served as an opportunity to introduce the public to the partnership between them and chocolate-producing Callebaut.

The King was shown a profile of his face, depicted on the Belgian Euro, being printed in 3d-chocolate. Later, a lunch was served with a 3d-chocolate dessert.

The King’s flat profile could be created from scratch in five days. “Idealy we would like to print the entire face and head of the King in chocolate. But the technique is not quite up for that yet in this short amount of time”, Pascale Meulemeester of Callebaut says. “But we are heading in the right direction “, says Nina Hoff, one of ByFlow’s founders.

By 3d-printing food Callebaut and ByFlow wish to stimulate the durable production and transport of chocolate. By 2025, specific goals should have been met that support this durable wish. “Chocolate has to be slafe-free and been processed under good circumstances “, Meulemeester says, “Furthermore, our carbon footprint should be close to zero.”

Printing food should help with this. However, governmental support should give an extra push to the process.  “Digital technology should help us improve the durable character of our product, but it is mostly an instigator. Strict legislation should make it so that every chocolate producer goes about its work in the same way. ”