The Borneo Post

This is how fake meat might feed your dog

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If you’re feeding your large dog the same as you, your dog is eating more meat than you are.

IN AMERICA’S food- obsessed landscape, the quickest route to a new idea is to look for something already being done- and then make it vegan. Wild Earth Inc., a startup based in Berkeley, California, is doing that to pet food with lab- created proteins. Translated, that means fake meat for Fido.

The stakes are far from small potatoes. Sixty- eight per cent of Americans own four-legged friends, a paw- dropping 184 million dogs and cats to be precise. To feed this mass of tail-wagging companions, we spend almost US$ 30 billion ( RM114 billion) annually. Pet food-predominan­tly animal-meat products-represents as much as 30 per cent of all meat consumptio­n in America.

According to a first- of-itskind study on how that sweet blond lab on your kitchen floor impacts the environmen­t, UCLA professor Gregory Okin writes that if American pets were to establish a sovereign nation, it would rank fifth in global meat consumptio­n. This nation of pooches and kitties consumes about 19 per cent as many calories as humans, but because their diets are higher in protein, their total animal- derived calorie intake amounts to about 33 per cent that of humans.

“If you’re feeding your large dog the same as you, your dog is eating more meat than you are,” said Dr. Cailin Heinze, a Tufts faculty member and boardcerti­fied veterinary nutritioni­st.

Food consumptio­n by dogs and cats is responsibl­e for releasing up to 64 million tons of greenhouse gases every year. Developing fake meat for pets may help put a dent in that, as well as the use of water and land needed to breed all that livestock.

Dr Cailin Heinze, a Tufts faculty member and board-certified veterinary nutritioni­st

In doing so, the industry might pave the way toward replacing all the real meat in your fridge, too.

As global human population approaches eight billion, said Ron Shigeta, one of the founders of Wild Earth, “the opportunit­y here is to create something that is safe and sustainabl­e.”

First, they’re starting with your pets. With US$ 4 million in seed money, Wild Earth hopes to be the first pet food brand based on cellular agricultur­e. In 2013, Shigeta and co-founder Ryan Bethencour­t started Berkeley Biolabs, followed by Indie Bio-a Bay Area synthetic biology accelerato­r-before getting into pet food-which, like products for human consumptio­n, has tilted ever-more toward higher nutritiona­l value.

The initial product Wild Earth plans to sell from its direct-toc-onsumer website is a koji-based dog treat. That’s a lucrative choice, apparently, since the the American Pet Products Associatio­n said dogs are given more treats than any other pet species.

Market research firm Kerry reports that 34 per cent of new product developmen­t for pet food last year was in treats.

Bethencour­t compares his company’s production of “clean” protein to that of sake-imagine giant fermentati­on tanks-right down to using the same ingredient to fuel its protein growth. Koji, a fungus, is the Japanese version of baker’s yeast. It grows rapidly inside tanks, along with sugar and nutrients, at the right balmy temperatur­e. The result is a plant-based protein with a close match to eggs or animalbase­d meat. Because koji is widely consumed by humans, it already has a GRAS (Generally Recognised As Safe) designatio­n. Wild Earth’s supply chain is simple-it uses only a handful of ingredient­s-and easily traceable.

“Now that millennial­s have officially taken the reins as the primary demographi­c of pet owners, they stand to further develop the humanisati­on- of-pets trend,” writes Bob Vetere, the president of APPA, in its annual pet survey. A lot of that has to do with the environmen­t and an increased emphasis on nutrition, but that’s not all there is to it.

So far this year, there have been recalls due to Listeria, Salmonella and pentobarbi­tal contaminat­ion. The J.M. Smucker Co., which makes Gravy Train and Kibbles ‘N Bits, as well as a private label food for Walmart Inc., had to voluntaril­y recall its dog food when traces of pentobarbi­tal were found. Use of fake meat may obviate risks associated with supply chains that rely on meat scraps.

 ??  ?? An employee assists a customer with dog food at a Petco store in Clark, New Jersey on Oct 2, 2015. — WP-Bloomberg photo
An employee assists a customer with dog food at a Petco store in Clark, New Jersey on Oct 2, 2015. — WP-Bloomberg photo

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