Santa Fe New Mexican

Fresh from the lab: Meat without slaughter

Startups hope to have products on market in a few years

- By Terence Chea TERRY CHEA/ASSOCIATED PRESS

UEMERYVILL­E, Calif. ma Valeti slices into a pan-fried chicken cutlet in the kitchen of his startup, Memphis Meats. He sniffs the tender morsel on his fork before taking a bite. He chews slowly, absorbing the taste.

“Our chicken is chicken. … You’ve got to taste it to believe it,” Valeti says.

This is no ordinary piece of poultry. No chicken was raised or slaughtere­d to harvest the meat. It was produced in a laboratory by extracting cells from a chicken and feeding them in a nutrient broth until the cell culture grew into raw meat.

Memphis Meats, based in Emeryville, Calif., is one of a growing number of startups worldwide that are making cell-based or cultured meat. They want to offer an alternativ­e to traditiona­l meat production that they say is damaging the environmen­t and causing unnecessar­y harm to animals, but they are far from becoming mainstream and face pushback from livestock producers.

“You are ultimately going to continue the choice of eating meat for many generation­s to come without putting undue stress on the planet,” said Valeti, a former cardiologi­st who co-founded Memphis Meats in 2015 after seeing the power of stem cells to treat disease.

The company, which also has produced cellgrown beef and duck, has attracted investment­s from food giants Cargill and Tyson Foods as well as billionair­es Richard Branson and Bill Gates.

A report released in June by consulting firm A.T. Kearney predicts that by 2040, cultured meat will make up 35 percent of meat consumed worldwide, while plant-based alternativ­es will compose 25 percent.

“The large-scale livestock industry is viewed by many as an unnecessar­y evil,” the report says. “With the advantages of novel vegan meat replacemen­ts and cultured meat over convention­ally produced meat, it is only a matter of time before meat replacemen­ts capture a substantia­l market share.”

But first, cultured meat must overcome significan­t challenges, including bringing down the exorbitant cost of production, showing regulators it’s safe and enticing consumers.

“We’re a long way off from becoming a commercial reality because there are many hurdles

we have to tackle,” said Ricardo San Martin, research director of the alternativ­e meat program at the University of California, Berkeley. “We don’t know if consumers are going to buy this or not.” As global demand for meat grows, supporters say cell-based protein is more sustainabl­e than traditiona­l meat because it doesn’t require the land, water and crops needed to raise livestock — a major source of greenhouse gas emissions.

Many consumers would love to eat meat that doesn’t require killing animals, said Brian Spears, who founded a San Francisco startup called New Age Meats that served its cellbased pork sausages to curious foodies at a tasting last September.

“People want meat. They don’t want slaughter,” Spears said. “So we make slaughter-free meat, and we know there’s a massive market for people that want delicious meat that doesn’t require animal slaughter.”

Finless Foods, another startup in Emeryville, is making cultured fish and seafood. It’s produced cell-based versions of salmon, carp and sea bass, and it’s working on bluefin tuna, a popular species that is overfished and contains high levels of mercury. The company has invited guests to sample its cell-based fish cakes.

“The ocean is a very fragile ecosystem, and we are really driving it to the brink of collapse,” CEO Michael Selden said. “By moving human consumptio­n of seafood out of the ocean and onto land and creating it in this cleaner way, we can basically do something that’s better for everybody.”

The emerging industry moved a step closer to market in March when the U.S. Department of Agricultur­e and the Food and Drug Administra­tion announced plans to jointly oversee the production and labeling of cell-based meat.

Food-safety advocates will be watching to ensure the agencies provide rigorous oversight and protect people from bacterial contaminat­ion and other health threats, said Jaydee Hanson, policy director at the nonprofit Center for Food Safety.

“It will be important for the public that this be well regulated,” Hanson said. “Do these really solve the environmen­tal problem? Do they really solve the animal welfare problem? That needs to be part of the review as well.”

If cultured-meat companies use geneticall­y modified cells, they would face even greater scrutiny from consumers and regulators, he said.

 ??  ?? Lab automation engineer Chigozie Nri prepares nutrients to feed cells, as research director Nicholas Legendre looks on, in the laboratory of cultured meat startup New Age Meats, which has produced cell-based pork in San Francisco. A growing number of startups are making cellbased or cultured meat that doesn’t require slaughteri­ng animals.
Lab automation engineer Chigozie Nri prepares nutrients to feed cells, as research director Nicholas Legendre looks on, in the laboratory of cultured meat startup New Age Meats, which has produced cell-based pork in San Francisco. A growing number of startups are making cellbased or cultured meat that doesn’t require slaughteri­ng animals.
 ??  ?? Uma Valeti
Uma Valeti

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