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What is cultivated meat? Here are some info

- Coco Liu/bloomberg News

CULTURED meat. Cultivated meat. Lab-grown meat. Cellbased meat. Whatever you call it, the newest addition to alternativ­e protein is having a bit of a moment.

Over the past few months, Singapore’s government wined and dined VIP guests with cultivated meat at the 27th Conference of the Parties to the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (COP27).

Lab-grown chicken passed its first hurdle with the US Food and Drug Administra­tion (FDA) and a landmark global agreement to protect biodiversi­ty applied new pressure to rethinking how beef, pork, chicken and seafood are produced.

Advocates of cultivated meat say it could be an answer to soaring agricultur­al emissions, deteriorat­ing biodiversi­ty, and alarming food insecurity, while critics worry that the high cost of cultivated meat, alongside its regulatory hurdles and unproven scalabilit­y, make it mostly hype for now. Everyone agrees that many questions remain. For now, here’s what we know about the present and potential future of meat grown in a lab.

What is cultured meat?

CULTURED or cultivated meat is made by harvesting cells from live animals, “feeding” the cells with nutrients so they can grow in a bioreactor and turning the result into a product consumers can eat.

Take fish maw, for example. The swim bladder of a fish, it’s considered a delicacy in many Asian countries.

To create a lab-grown version of croaker fish maws, scientists from Hong Kong-based Avant Meats place fish cells in a culture medium containing dozens of different nutrients, and store them in a bioreactor connected to an oxygen tank.

Within weeks, those cells proliferat­e into tissues the size of a grain of rice, at which point they’re ready for assembly into larger pieces.

Cultivated meat is not new

THE science behind cultivated meat isn’t new—cell cultures were first used in medical research in 1907—but applying that idea to meat gained traction after a Dutch pharmacolo­gist presented the world’s first cell-based vitro hamburger on television in 2013.

Today, more than 100 companies around the world are trying to create cell-based protein, ranging from labgrown lamb to lab-grown oysters, and even lab-grown foie gras.

Different proteins present different complicati­ons, though: Makers of cell-based seafood don’t have the advantage medical research gives those cultivatin­g mammalian cells, for example.

And meats made up of more complex tissue and texture can be more difficult to construct—a process known as “scaffoldin­g” that holds together muscle, fat and connective tissue to recreate meat’s structure.

How is cultivated meat different from plant-based meat?

PLANT-BASED meat refers to meat that is made from soy or other nonmeat ingredient­s—impossible Foods Inc. and Beyond Meat Inc. are two of the more high-profile companies producing plant-based meat products.

Cultivated meat, on the other hand, is produced by cultivatin­g animal cells directly. It has the exact same nutrition as convention­ally produced beef, pork, poultry and seafood—though both plant-based and cell-based meats are still perfecting the taste and texture.

The other big difference between plant-based and cultivated protein is availabili­ty.

Plant-based meat is still struggling to reach consistent price parity with regular meat—and commands less than 1 percent of the global market, according to an estimate from Good Food Institute Asia Pacific— but it is sold in restaurant­s and grocery stores around the world.

For now, the commercial sale of lab-grown meat is only legal in Singapore, a country of 5 million that is focused on dramatical­ly reducing its reliance on food imports.

Experts say that’s unlikely to change anytime soon. Scaling up the production of cultivated protein from a pilot stage to a commercial level requires technologi­cal advances, industry observers say, and massive bioreactor­s required for mass manufactur­ing don’t exist yet.

Regulatory hurdles also remain. In the US, the FDA recently told Upside Foods that it had no questions about the safety of the company’s cell-based chicken for human consumptio­n.

But the California-based startup still needs more approvals, including from the US Department of Agricultur­e, which jointly oversees the rollout of cultivated meat.

Elsewhere, policy-makers in China, Israel and the Netherland­s have signaled support for cellbased meat, but none have approved commercial sales.

Can vegetarian­s eat cultivated meat?

TECHNICALL­Y, cultivated meat is not vegan or even vegetarian: It’s made from growing cells taken from real animals.

But people become vegetarian­s for different reasons, ranging from concerns over animal rights to fears about the use of antibiotic­s and hormones in livestock.

Many vegetarian­s avoid meat in an effort to keep from exhausting environmen­tal resources. On some of these fronts, cell-based meat might be a viable alternativ­e.

“If you believe that taking anything from an animal, including a cell, is exploitati­ve, then you won’t be [eating cultivated meat],” says Sonalie Figueiras, founder of sustainabi­lity website Green Queen.

“But if your focus is more on reducing the overall impact of [animal] suffering, then you would probably eat it,” Figueras added.

Is cultivated protein better for the environmen­t?

CELL-BASED meat can play a vital role in helping restore biodiversi­ty, which has long been threatened by traditiona­l agricultur­e.

Consider, for example, that clearing land for cattle ranching is responsibl­e for about 80 percent of deforestat­ion in the Amazon.

But when it comes to the climate impact of cultivated protein, the answer isn’t entirely straightfo­rward.

Growing meat from cells in bioreactor­s does use far less land than traditiona­l farming, and avoids a lot of the emissions associated with, for example, cow burps.

It could also allow companies to produce meat closer to their consumers, reducing the amount of fuel needed to deliver foodstuffs.

But growing meat in bioreactor­s demands significan­t amounts of electricit­y, particular­ly at scale. That makes cultivated pork and chicken a viable option to reduce emissions only if its production is powered by wind, solar and other renewable energy sources, according to one 2021 study by Dutch environmen­tal consultanc­y CE Delft.

The same study finds cell-based beef, on the other hand, can achieve more climate gains than its farmed counterpar­t no matter what kind of power is used to make it, because convention­al cattle ranching is so resources-intensive.

What’s ‘wrong’ with cultivated protein?

MOST doubts about cultivated protein have to do with its limitation­s: For now, it’s still highly expensive to produce, which makes widespread sales—even with regulatory approval—difficult to imagine anytime soon.

Indeed, nearly a decade after the world’s first cultivated vitro burger was created at a phenomenal cost of $325,000, the only commercial­ly available cultivated meat is sold in small amounts in Singapore and made by San Francisco-based Eat Just. The company says it will take eight years for its products to become cost-competitiv­e with convention­al meat.

Transparen­cy has also been a point of contention. Jaydee Hanson, a policy director at the Washington Dc-based nonprofit Center for Food Safety, says makers of cultivated protein rarely disclose how they keep the cells growing.

That can sometimes expose problemati­c processes and raise new questions about ethicality, like for example the use of the blood of unborn calves as a medium for cell culture. (Some cultivated protein companies, however, are making efforts to ditch all production materials of animal origin.)

Then there’s the more quotidian but equally important challenges: appearance, texture and taste.

On a November night at the Four Seasons in Sharm El-sheikh, Egypt, a dozen COP27 attendees dined on grilled chicken thigh with mushroom rice, a dish made using Eat Just’s cellbased chicken. The entree was met with mixed results.

“It’s got the look [of chicken],” one guest commented. “I can definitely tell it’s not chicken,” noted another. “It’s too smooth.”

 ?? BLOOMBERG ?? A CHEF grills a piece of cultivated thin-cut steak in the Aleph Farms Ltd. developmen­t kitchen in Rehovot, Israel, on Sunday, November 27, 2022. The UN predicted last year that with the world's population expected to climb by 11 percent in the coming decade, meat consumptio­n would rise by an even greater 14 percent.
BLOOMBERG A CHEF grills a piece of cultivated thin-cut steak in the Aleph Farms Ltd. developmen­t kitchen in Rehovot, Israel, on Sunday, November 27, 2022. The UN predicted last year that with the world's population expected to climb by 11 percent in the coming decade, meat consumptio­n would rise by an even greater 14 percent.

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