Qatar
Biomimicry accelerating sustainable technology by learning from nature
Many living organisms on Earth inhabit an environment that is, in one way or another, trying to work against it: scorching heat, freezing cold, scarce water, relentless predators. Over vast stretches of time, life has been engineered to respond not with brute force but with elegant design in the shape of structures, surfaces, and processes that solve problems with remarkable efficiency and minimal waste. Biomimicry is the discipline that studies these natural strategies and asks a deceptively simple question: what if human technology did the same?
Popularised by the biologist Janine Benyus in her 1997 book Biomimicry: Innovation Inspired by Nature, the term describes an approach to innovation that seeks sustainable solutions by studying nature’s models, structures, and processes. It is not just about copying a shape, but understanding the underlying principle that makes a biological strategy work and translating it into human design. Biomimicry sits at the intersection of biology, engineering, materials science, and architecture, and is gaining serious momentum as a research methodology for a world urgently seeking sustainable solutions.
How it works
Biomimicry operates on three distinct levels. The first is form: borrowing a shape or structure from nature to improve a product’s performance. A classic example is Japan’s Shinkansen bullet train which was redesigned with a nose resembling a kingfisher’s beak, cutting sonic booms and improving energy efficiency. The second is process: learning how organisms manufacture or assemble objects, often at ambient temperature and without toxic by-products. The third, and deepest, is ecosystem: designing whole systems in which waste from one process becomes input for another, mirroring the closed-loop logic by which natural ecosystems sustain themselves indefinitely.
What distinguishes biomimicry from earlier forms of bio-inspiration is its explicit sustainability ethic. Biomimicry practitioners do not simply borrow a clever mechanism; they ask whether the resulting technology operates within the planet’s ecological limits. Nature runs on sunlight, uses only what it needs, and recycles everything. These are precisely the principles the circular economy seeks to embed within modern society. In this sense, biomimicry is not just an innovation tool but a design philosophy aligned with the long-term health of the planet.
From laboratory to real world
Biomimicry is already delivering tangible results across diverse fields. Researchers from the National Institute of Standards and Technology and Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) have observed that dogs consistently outperform conventional explosive detectors at airports. In response, they developed a 3D-printed replica of a dog’s nose which boosted the sensitivity of a commercial explosive detector sixteen-fold.
Inspired by camels’ pairing of insulating fur with an evaporative skin, MIT engineers have also built a power-free two-layer hydrogel-aerogel cooler that maintains objects more than 7°C below ambient for over eight days — five times longer than hydrogel alone. The same animal’s nasal turbinates act as passive counter-current heat and water exchangers, recovering up to 60% of the moisture in its exhaled breath, a geometry now being adapted for heating, ventilation, and air conditioning, dehumidification, and atmospheric water harvesting.
In architecture, ORNILUX bird-protection glass uses a UV-reflective coating inspired by spiders that weave UV-reflective silk into their webs. The glass becomes visible to birds yet remains virtually transparent to human eyes, reducing collisions with building glass by up to ninety percent. More recent developments include Xpeng’s iron humanoid robot featuring a biomimetic spine, bionic muscles, and flexible synthetic skin that enables human-like movement far beyond rigid mechanical frames. Mass production is planned for 2026.
Nature-conscious design in Qatar
Closer to home, Qatar has also embraced nature-conscious design at an ambitious scale. Inspired by the gypsum crystal better known as the desert rose, the National Museum of Qatar comprises 539 interlocking disc elements that create shaded courtyards mediating between the building and the country’s intense climate. Msheireb, the world’s first sustainable downtown regeneration project, draws on traditional Gulf architecture: streets oriented to capture sea breezes, thicker walls for thermal mass, and building clusters that create natural ventilation corridors, cutting energy consumption by 30%.
These achievements are significant. Yet there remains a clear opportunity to go deeper to invest in dedicated local biomimicry research that studies how the organisms and ecosystems of the Arabian Peninsula have adapted to extreme heat, coastal humidity, and salinity, and to translate those biological insights into technologies purpose-built for this region.
At the Qatar Environment and Energy Research Institute (QEERI), part of Hamad Bin Khalifa University, this work is underway. One line of research draws on the micro-textured skin of sharks whose dermal denticles naturally resist biofouling to develop coatings that improve the performance of desalination membranes. This approach is currently being advanced through QEERI’s participation in the XPRIZE Water Scarcity competition, a global initiative focused on developing relevant innovative and scalable solutions. Another initiative investigates region-specific surface modifications to combat soiling on solar panels. Qatar’s coastal desert, with its combination of high humidity and airborne salts, produces a soiling profile distinct from that of inland arid zones. Nature-inspired surface engineering must account for this specificity to be effective.
A framework for the future
Biomimicry is not a silver bullet for translating a biological principle into scalable technology. As a research framework, it nevertheless offers something that purely computational approaches sometimes lack: a starting point, already proven under nature’s most demanding conditions. And new tools are making the framework more practical. Nano-fabrication can now replicate biological structures with increasing fidelity. Large Language Models accelerate the screening of biological databases for engineering-relevant analogues. At QEERI, a platform called ThinQa (thin.qa) generates three-dimensional structures from mathematical equations — many elegantly found in nature — ready for modification and direct 3D printing, reducing the journey from concept to evaluable prototype from months to hours.
For societies pursuing ambitious sustainability targets, biomimicry offers a powerful reframing of the innovation challenge. Instead of only asking "what can we invent?” it invites us to consider "what has already been perfected in the natural world, and what can it teach us?” The answers are not exotic or distant. They are in the texture of a shark’s skin, the aerodynamics of a camel’s breath, and the crystalline geometry of a desert rose. Our task and our opportunity is to learn to read them.
The writer is a Scientist within the Materials Unit at Hamad Bin Khalifa University’s (HBKU) Qatar Environment and Energy Research Institute (QEERI).
(This piece has been submitted by HBKU’s Communications Directorate on behalf of its author. The thoughts and views expressed are the author’s own and do not necessarily reflect an official University stance).