Santa Fe New Mexican

The fish is boneless — and fishless

Race is on to produce seafood alternativ­es

- KELSEY MCCLELLAN/NEW YORK TIMES By David Yaffe-Bellany

First, there was the meatless burger. Soon we may have fishless fish.

Impossible Foods, the California company behind the meatless Impossible Whopper now available at Burger King, is joining a crowded field of food companies developing alternativ­es to traditiona­l seafood with plant-based recipes or laboratory techniques that allow scientists to grow fish from cells.

So far, much of Impossible’s work has focused on the biochemist­ry of fish flavor, which can be reproduced using heme, the same protein undergirdi­ng its meat formula, according to Pat Brown, the company’s chief executive. In June, Impossible’s 124-person research and developmen­t team, which the company plans to increase to around 200 by the end of next year, produced an anchovy-flavored broth made from plants, he said.

“It was being used to make paella,” Brown said. “But you could use it to make Caesar dressing or something like that.”

The fishless-fish project is part of Impossible’s grand ambitions to devise tasty replacemen­ts for every animal-based food on the market by 2035. Whether that aim is achievable, either scientific­ally or financiall­y, remains to be seen. But for now, Brown said, he’s confident Impossible’s plant-based beef recipe can be reconfigur­ed to simulate a new source of protein.

It’s unclear whether consumers — even those who eat meatless burgers — will embrace fish alternativ­es. Those faux-beef products owe their success partly to the enthusiasm of so-called flexitaria­ns, people who want to reduce their meat consumptio­n without fully converting to vegetarian­ism, but flexitaria­ns are not necessaril­y motivated by a desire to save the planet. Indeed, industry experts say, many of them are drawn to plant-based meat more for its perceived health benefits than for its role in reducing the food industry’s reliance on production techniques that release greenhouse gases.

“A lot of people will simply say if you eat meat, you’re increasing your risk of cancer,” said Tom Rees, who studies the packaged food industry for the market research firm Euromonito­r Internatio­nal. “There isn’t an equivalent of that for fish.”

Proponents of plant-based fish describe the project as an environmen­tal imperative. While billions of people across the world depend on seafood as their main source of protein, the world’s marine fish stocks are 90 percent depleted, primarily because of overfishin­g, according to the World Economic Forum.

“The commercial fishing industry is strip mining oceans and destroying aquatic ecosystems in a way that makes the plundering of the Amazon rainforest seem like small potatoes,” said Bruce Friedrich, who runs the Good Food Institute, an organizati­on that advocates alternativ­es to meat and fish.

Brown called the depletion of fish population­s “an ongoing meltdown” that world leaders lacked the political will to stop. One widespread strategy to combat the problem — aquacultur­e, or the breeding of fish on commercial farms — has its own environmen­tal consequenc­es.

Leigh Habegger, executive director for the Seafood Harvesters of America, an industry group, disputed Brown’s analysis of the commercial fishing business, arguing that American fishing companies have made great strides in improving the sustainabi­lity of the industry.

“Eating wild-caught, American seafood should be an easy choice,” Habegger said. “When consumers purchase seafood harvested in their waters, they’re supporting coastal communitie­s and small businesses, and there’s no question as to the health and sustainabi­lity of that seafood.”

 ??  ?? This fake salmon by Wild Type was grown from cells in a lab. The company is one of several developing seafood alternativ­es.
This fake salmon by Wild Type was grown from cells in a lab. The company is one of several developing seafood alternativ­es.

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