The future of lab-grown meat and how it can meet the need for protein
A few products are already in restaurants and on supermarket shelves.
By REUTERS, Published:
DECEMBER 16, 2021
The world's first lab-grown beef burger is seen after it was cooked at a launch event in west London
(photo credit: REUTERS)
The protein sector is at a crossroads. On the one hand, global
demand for animal protein has never been higher. On the other, meat and
dairy already have an outsized hoofprint on the world’s farmlands. And
with the climate crisis devastating natural and agricultural resources,
we know the Earth’s ecosystems cannot support an expanded traditional
agricultural sector.
Plant-based protein has experienced rapid growth but is dwarfed by the size of the global meat protein market.
Enter
cellular agriculture. Every day brings news of new venture capital
funding, adding over US$9.7 billion in global investments. Cellular
agriculture encompasses a raft of technologies and approaches that
manufacture food and other products normally sourced from plants and
animals including dairy proteins, egg proteins, chocolate, honey, red
meat, poultry, seafood, leather, silk, and ingredients including
sweeteners and flavorings.
Cellular agriculture entered the public eye in 2013 when tissue
engineering researcher Mark Post produced the first test-tube burger.
This prototype cost hundreds of thousands of dollars but today, the same
patty can be made for about 10 euros, or $15. In the past two years,
dozens of companies have sprung up in Singapore, Israel and California
to develop consumer products almost biologically identical to those
traditionally sourced from plants and animals.
A
few products are already in restaurants and on supermarket shelves. The
cellular agriculture dairy company Perfect Day brews dairy proteins in
bioreactors using yeast, much like a craft brewer produces beer. One of
the largest plant-based food companies, Impossible Foods, uses
cellular-derived soy heme in its signature burger.
Their
Whoppers are for sale at Burger King and they have just raised a
further US$500 million in investment capital to scale up production. The
food-tech startup Eat Just mixes chicken proteins produced through
cellular agriculture with plant-based ingredients to create an analogue
to a chicken nugget.
Some
current cellular agriculture technologies involve animal-based inputs
such as stem cells and growth media. These products are not necessarily
vegetarian, and so may not be universally accepted by consumers for
cultural, religious, or dietary reasons.
That
said, there is a huge potential to reduce water consumption, energy
use, land use, and greenhouse gases. While there are debates as the
extent of the hoped-for environmental benefits, optimists are betting on
the fact that carefully designed bioreactors using renewable energy
will be more sustainable than a lot of the world’s livestock systems.
Canada is already an agri-food powerhouse. We export $62 billion in
agri-food products annually — which represents 12 percent of our total
exports — and the sector employs over 500,000 people. Cellular
agriculture offers us a chance to grow this economic position while
strengthening domestic food security and helping sustainably feed a
growing population.
Ontario
Genomics, alongside researchers at the Food and Agriculture Institute
at the University of the Fraser Valley, prepared a report examining the
potential role of cellular agriculture in Canada. The report shows
cellular agriculture could create up to $12.5 billion in opportunities
in food innovation for Canada, which would also create up to 142,000 new
jobs.
To realize
the potential of the cellular agricultural industry, we must support
research and development, foster an entrepreneurial startup culture and
create transparent regulatory frameworks for new methods of food
production.
The
Ontario Genomics report provides three recommendations for helping this
sector obtain a foothold. First, we need a national vision and strategy
for the Canadian cellular agriculture industry. To become a global
leader, it is essential to have an intellectual foundation that can both
encourage and support innovation.
Second,
we must establish a clear and transparent regulatory framework for
cellular agricultural products produced in Canada and abroad. This
should build on existing regulatory processes by upholding the highest
food safety and nutritional standards as well as promoting sustainable
development.
Third,
we must support mechanisms for research and commercial development.
Encouraging public-private partnerships, collaborating on public and
private investment, developing infrastructure, and supporting training
will all be necessary.
A
combination of public awareness and technological advancement in areas
like cellular agriculture has given us an opportunity to think about how
we can change our food systems for the better.
As a country, we must ask ourselves if we want to be leading this
change. If we do not seize this opportunity, we will watch others reap
the benefits of innovation while we import cellular agriculture products
rather than producing our own and growing Canada’s export position.
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