The New Zealand Herald

Rachel Stewart

Artificial milk and meat pose huge risk to farming industry

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Just when you think that BigAg can’t do denial any better than dairying’s proven impact on waterways, they come up with another pearler. Despite all the evidence, industry leaders don’t believe plant-based meat and synthetic milk is a risk to the industry.

Whether it’s wilful denial — like with the waterways — or plain ignorance, who knows? Either way, they will need to make serious adjustment­s to their business model — and soon.

Last year I spoke to a herd of provincial Federated Farmers dinosaurs about this imminent threat. They laughed and dismissed me as the fool they honestly think I am.

Another fool, the Prime Minister’s chief science adviser Peter Gluckman, told the recent NZBIO conference that great strides were being made commercial­ising artificial milk and meat. He thought most milk sold worldwide in “20 to 25 years” could be synthetic, though it might be “some time” before scientists could create a T-bone steak.

Gluckman also said synthetic milk was the biggest threat to New Zealand, because of the country’s reliance on “liquid gold” dairy exports.

I disagree with Gluckman only in his timeframes. It will be happening well within the next decade. Based on some of the investors who are driving the tech — Leonardo DiCaprio, James Cameron, Peter Jackson, Richard Branson, Bill Gates — it’s a solid bet.

They get that the food revolution is here, and that the public is increasing­ly seeing traditiona­l agricultur­e as an enemy to a steadily warming planet.

And what’s not to like? No more needless animal suffering, or nitratelad­en rivers, and an end to outsized agricultur­al emissions. Sounds like a winner to me.

The New Zealand public is still far from embracing the idea of a plantbased meat patty that looks and tastes exactly like meat.

The manly men say that they would rather go without than eat such a wretched thing.

Synthetic milk will prevail much more quickly.

With a projected 9.7 billion humans on earth by 2050, this is an intelligen­t response to the planetary crisis of dwindling resources.

The World Bank says global agricultur­e contribute­s 18 per cent of global greenhouse gases — 40 per cent more than all global transport emissions combined, including planes, trucks, cars and shipping.

By all accounts synthetic milk tastes exactly like the real thing. The ingredient­s can also be fine-tuned to be lower in cholestero­l or lactose-free; a marketing goldmine in today’s health-conscious society.

One of the things that will need work is training the media (like me) to stop using the word “synthetic”. The guru on such matters is food strategist Dr Rosie Bosworth, who divides her time between Auckland and San Francisco — where much of the new food technology is taking place.

“It’s easy to see how our fixation with the idea that pasture-raised food products will always be superior has come about. New Zealand’s farming industry and media alike have an obsession with referring to these new forms of protein as ‘synthetic’, ‘fake’, ‘GMO’ or ‘lab-grown’ — less than palatable faux versions of NZ pasturerai­sed living animals.

“The upshot? Kiwis get the impression that these new foods aren’t natural or safe to eat, and thus are definitely not something the world — especially our key export markets — would ever want to eat. But rest assured, these new foods are natural and definitely not fake. They are just produced differentl­y.”

And what happens globally impacts massively on our little corner of the world. Which is why Fonterra’s recent comments to the National Business Review are worrying.

“Milk from cows provides a natural and complex mixture of proteins, fats, minerals and other nutrients, which will be almost impossible to manufactur­e, so there will always be a global, growing market for dairy. . . . it’s clear that the natural, nutritiona­l strength of dairy will be the premium nutrition of choice.”

Such hubris, such confidence, such delusion. I imagine the whalers felt exactly like that, you know, before petroleum oils and machinery lubricants were found to be cheaper and more efficient than whale oil, and the well-establishe­d industry collapsed before their very eyes.

The future has a way of arriving whether you’re ready for it or not. BigAg needs to prepare New Zealand farmers for a tidal wave of technologi­cal change — rather than coddling them into believing it’s all under control. Anything else is nothing short of negligent, and cruel.

 ?? Picture/Getty Images ?? Synthetic milk tastes like the real thing and ingredient­s can be finetuned to be lower in cholestero­l.
Picture/Getty Images Synthetic milk tastes like the real thing and ingredient­s can be finetuned to be lower in cholestero­l.

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