Calgary Herald

Cargill, Gates bet on startup making meat without slaughter

- SHRUTI DATE SINGH

Cargill Inc., one of the CHICAGO largest global agricultur­al companies, has joined Bill Gates and other business giants to invest in a nascent technology to make meat from self-producing animal cells amid rising consumer demand for protein that’s less reliant on feed, land and water.

Memphis Meats, which produces beef, chicken and duck directly from animal cells without raising and slaughteri­ng livestock or poultry, raised US$17 million from investors including Cargill, Gates and billionair­e Richard Branson, according to a statement on the San Francisco-based startup’s website. The fundraisin­g round was led by venture-capital firm DFJ, which has previously backed several socialmind­ed retail startups.

“I’m thrilled to have invested in Memphis Meats,” Branson said in an email. “I believe that in 30 years or so we will no longer need to kill any animals and that all meat will either be clean or plant-based, taste the same and also be much healthier for everyone.”

This is the latest move by an agricultur­al giant to respond to consumers, especially millennial­s, who are rapidly leaving their mark on the U.S. food world. That’s happening through surging demand for organic products, increasing focus on food that’s considered sustainabl­e and greater attention on animal treatment. Big poultry and livestock processors have started to take up alternativ­es to traditiona­l meat.

“The world loves to eat meat, and it is core to many of our cultures and traditions,” Uma Valeti, co-founder and chief executive of Memphis Meats, said in the statement. “The way convention­al meat is produced today creates challenges for the environmen­t, animal welfare and human health. These are problems that everyone wants to solve.”

To date, Memphis Meats has raised US$22 million, signalling a commitment to the “clean-meat movement,” the company said.

Cargill has “taken an equity position in Memphis Meats’ first series of funding,” Sonya Roberts, the president of growth ventures at Cargill Protein, said in an email, without disclosing the investment amount.

“Our equity position with Memphis Meats gives Cargill entry into the cultured protein market and allows us to work together to further innovate and commercial­ize,” Roberts said.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada