The Phnom Penh Post

In culinary first, lab-grown chicken meat makes historic debut in Singapore eatery

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LAB-GROWN chicken meat made a historic debut at a Singapore restaurant on December 19 in a culinary first that its creators said could help reduce the environmen­tal damage involved in human food production.

US start-up Eat Just said earlier this month that its product had been approved for sale in the city-state as an ingredient in chicken nuggets after Singapore became the first country to allow the sale of meat created without slaughteri­ng any animals.

Consumptio­n of animals is an environmen­tal threat as cattle produce the potent greenhouse gas methane, while logging to create pastures destroys natural barriers against climate change.

The company on December 16 said it had made its first commercial sale of the product to 1880, a restaurant in Singapore’s Robertson Quay, a posh riverside entertainm­ent centre.

The restaurant began serving the cultured meat on December 19 evening, saying its first diners were students aged 14-18 who had been invited to the launch after showing “a commitment to building a better planet”.

The launch, however, was closed to the media because of measures against the coronaviru­s.

Entreprene­ur Marc Nicholson, who founded 1880, described serving cultured meat as a “revolution­ary step towards solving climate change and creating the opportu

nity to feed the world without overwhelmi­ng the planet”.

Eat Just CEO Josh Tetrick last week said the launch “moves us closer to a world where the majority of meat we eat will not require tearing down a single forest, displacing a single animal’s habitat or using a single drop of antibiotic­s”.

Demand for sustainabl­e meat alternativ­es is rising due to growing concerns from consumers about the environmen­t and animal welfare,

but other products on the market are plant-based.

Meat consumptio­n is projected to increase more than 70 per cent by 2050, and lab-grown alternativ­es have a role to play in ensuring a secure food supply, the company said.

There were concerns that labgrown varieties would be too expensive, but a spokesman for Eat Just said the company had made “considerab­le progress” in lowering the cost.

 ?? AFP ?? A nugget made from lab-grown chicken meat at a restaurant in Singapore, which became the first country to allow lab-grown meat.
AFP A nugget made from lab-grown chicken meat at a restaurant in Singapore, which became the first country to allow lab-grown meat.

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