
After its U.S. debut, Greenspace Herbs brings Quantum Ayurveda ingredients to India at Nutrify Today C-Suite Sumflex 2026, positioning frequency-led botanicals as a new frontier in nutraceutical innovation.
Bengaluru, June 15 — For decades, Ayurveda has travelled the world as India’s inheritance — herbs, extracts and classical formulations carrying the language of ancient wellness. At Nutrify Today C-Suite Sumflex 2026, Greenspace Herbs proposed a different framing: Ayurveda not merely as heritage, but as intellectual property.
The Bengaluru-based company formally launched its Quantum Ayurveda ingredients in India after a successful debut in the United States, choosing Sumflex not as a conventional product-launch venue but as a strategic boardroom for disruption. The gathering of global nutraceutical leaders, ministries from Middle Eastern and CIS nations, senior Maharashtra government officials, researchers and investors was exactly the kind of room that signals whether a new idea is merely interesting — or commercially consequential.
For Shafiulla Hirehal Nuruddin, Founder Director of Greenspace Herbs, the launch carried an ambition larger than any single product. The company’s thesis: India should not remain only a supplier of botanical raw materials to the world. It should become the owner of next-generation wellness science.
That distinction matters. India has always had the ingredients. What it has often lacked is the global narrative of proprietary processing, validated differentiation and premium scientific positioning. Quantum Ayurveda is Greenspace Herbs’ attempt to change that.
The Science and the Proposition
The company’s technology architecture is built around Quantum Ayurveda, AYUQUANTA 7™, EASI™ — Energized Active Supplement Ingredients and EASI™–FUSE, alongside a broad botanical-extract portfolio. Its branded ingredient platforms include BerberineQA™, AshwagandhaQA™, CurcuminQA™, FemHealQA™ and NerviTheraQA™.
The idea is simple to describe, though ambitious to prove at scale: use controlled frequencies, resonance and molecular-level energy loading to enhance how classical Ayurvedic ingredients behave — without changing their botanical identity. The metaphor used around the launch was deliberately vivid: common ingredients, tuned to signature frequencies, become like Formula 1 racing cars — lighter, faster and more efficient.
According to company data, CurcuminQA™ has demonstrated up to 20-fold higher bioavailability and 22-fold higher peak absorption levels, while AshwagandhaQA™ has shown significantly enhanced absorption and retention compared with conventional extracts.
In business terms, Greenspace is moving Ayurveda up the value chain — selling a processed, measured and branded version of an ingredient, the way specialty actives and patented delivery systems command premium attention in global markets.
“India invented Ayurveda as a living science of balance, energy and intelligence. My wish in this phase of life is to contribute to the industry by helping that science be seen with the seriousness it deserves,” said Shafiulla Hirehal Nuruddin, Founder Director, Greenspace Herbs.
“Just as Quantum Ayurveda needed a platform with global presence, we chose Nutrify Today C-Suite Sumflex for the official India launch because disruption must be introduced in the right room. This is Indian IP, Indian science and Indian responsibility moving to the world. For me, the objective was never only to launch ingredients — it was to launch a new way of thinking about Ayurveda.”
The Right Room
Unlike traditional trade events, Sumflex positions itself as a leadership platform where business, science, policy and investment converge. The launch audience reflected that ambition. Among those present were Dr. Geo Espinosa, internationally recognised for integrative urology; Dr. Dana Cohen, a leading voice in integrative and preventive medicine; Dr. James Munro, a respected leader in naturopathic medicine; Greg Macpherson, founder and chairman of one of New Zealand’s leading nutraceutical enterprises; Borna Bandari, CEO of Cymbiotika Middle East; and Dr. Ikhlas Khan, Director of the National Center for Natural Products Research, University of Mississippi.
Their presence is significant because Quantum Ayurveda sits at the intersection of three powerful global trends: consumers seeking natural solutions backed by science, brands seeking differentiated ingredients with measurable outcomes, and regulators demanding evidence, reproducibility and accountability.
Greenspace Herbs believes Quantum Ayurveda addresses all three. Its proprietary AYUQUANTA 7™ framework combines botanical extraction, AI-assisted ingredient mapping, computational analysis, spectroscopy, energy loading and validation methodologies into a structured innovation pathway.
The Bigger Question
Whether Quantum Ayurveda ultimately becomes a new industry category remains to be seen. What it certainly introduces is a provocative proposition: the future of Ayurveda may lie not in preserving tradition exactly as it was, but in understanding its principles deeply enough to evolve them responsibly.
For years, India has spoken of becoming a knowledge economy. But knowledge economies are built not only through manufacturing and exports — they are built through ownership of ideas, processes and intellectual property. Quantum Ayurveda is, at its core, an attempt to create such ownership.
The road ahead will demand scientific validation, global acceptance and commercial scalability. Buyers will ask about reproducibility, scientists about mechanisms, regulators about substantiation. Those are difficult questions — but they are the questions serious innovation attracts.
Nuruddin appears to welcome that scrutiny. His support of The Master Formulator, the world’s first live nutraceutical formulation reality competition at C-Suite Sumflex 2026, reflects a philosophy that industries advance when they invest in researchers, formulators and scientific talent — not only in commercial outcomes.
At its heart, the launch makes a bold assertion: India should not merely supply Ayurvedic ingredients to the world. It should define the next generation of Ayurvedic science. If Quantum Ayurveda succeeds, Greenspace Herbs may be remembered not for introducing another botanical ingredient platform, but for helping reposition Ayurveda itself — from ancient heritage to modern intellectual property.
And in an era increasingly defined by ownership of innovation, that may be one of the most consequential ambitions emerging from India’s nutraceutical sector today.