The Norwalk Hour

One Conn. man tries to convince officials to invest in cultured meat

- By Jordan Nathaniel Fenster

Once a week, Jon Hochschart­ner protests outside the Hartford offices of U.S. Sen. Richard Blumenthal. You can see him there with his hand-drawn, cardboard sign.

He's been outside Blumenthal's office once a week for 13 weeks now, encouragin­g the senator to support an increase in funding for cultured meat, often called lab-grown.

Before that, Hochschart­ner protested outside U.S. Sen. Chris Murphy's office for six weeks. Before that, Hochschart­ner protested outside the offices of U.S. Rep. John Larson once a week for 12 weeks.

“Blumenthal's a little bit harder in that my understand­ing is he's up on the 10th floor, his staff is up on the 10th floor of this big building,” said Hochschart­ner, of Simsbury. “It's also a building they share with other people so I don't always know when I'm waving a sign at someone driving in like if they actually work for Blumenthal or what, but it's been good so far.”

Cultured meat, sometimes called cultivated meat, is not fake. It's not, as are many meat alternativ­es, made out of textured pea protein, but is actually animal cells cultivated and grown into a chicken breast, for example, or a fish filet.

“Cultivated meat is grown from animal cells, without slaughter,” Hochschart­ner said. “You take a little bit of DNA, and through a bit of science magic, you grow a chicken breast without any of the things we don't eat like bones, eyes, brain, anything like that.”

Hochschart­ner, perhaps not surprising­ly, is a vegan, and a self-described animal activist. He's personally focused on ending the slaughter of the “billions, trillions if you count fish, animals that we kill every year for food,” he said, though he argues there are many reasons to support funding cultured meat.

Factory farms have been disease vectors, most recently with African swine fever, which has been ravaging pig farms around the world, and Hochschart­ner points to the environmen­tal impact, too.

“Cultivated meat will require a fraction of the greenhouse gas emissions that slaughtere­d meat does,” he said.

The barrier to a wide distributi­on of cultured meat is cost. Though the cost has gone from insanely high — $330,000 for a burger, according to Forbes — to just somewhat expensive, around $10 to produce a burger, Hochschart­ner believes further research will keep pushing prices down.

“Over the years, the science has just been progressin­g and progressin­g,” he said. “My hope is that with further research, eventually cultivated meat will be cheaper to produce than slaughtere­d meat.”

Hochschart­ner's immediate goal is simple: He seeks written commitment from Connecticu­t's elected representa­tives that they will support an increase in funding for cultured meat.

“I'm not sure who else I would protest,” he said, pointing to U.S. Rep. Ro Khanna from California, who last year led a group of legislator­s requesting $50 million in funding for cultivated meat research. “I'm hoping that my representa­tives will get on board with that.”

Though she was not among those legislator­s who signed on to Khanna's letter and has not been protested by Hochschart­ner, U.S. Rep. Rosa DeLauro, D-3, expressed her support for cultured meat, after the U.S. Department of Agricultur­e used $10 million to set up a National Institute for Cellular Agricultur­e at Tufts University.

“USDA's historic funding for a National Institute for Cellular Agricultur­e is an important advancemen­t for cultivated meat research and science,” she said in a statement. “I am pleased that USDA's leadership continues to recognize the important role these technologi­es can play in combating climate change and adding much-needed resiliency to our food system.”

Hochschart­ner has had some responses to his protests. A February letter from Larson expressed support citing the institute at Tufts, though without a specific commitment for further funding, Hochschart­ner called it “insufficie­nt.”

It was only after a second response a month later , in which Larson said he would “support the request for additional USDA funding on research for cultivated meat” that Hochschart­ner moved on to Murphy.

An April email from Murphy was succinct: “The truth is that our planet is in the midst of an ecological catastroph­e, and the need to address climate change is more urgent than ever,” Murphy wrote to Hochschart­ner. “That is why I support additional USDA funding to help address climate change, reduce greenhouse gas emissions, and support research that helps farmers improve their response to climate change.”

Blumenthal has responded, replying to Hochschart­ner in May that, “All of us have an interest in ensuring the food we eat is safe while reducing food production's impact on climate change.”

But Blumenthal also expressed concerns: “However, as we explore this new opportunit­y, we must also ensure these products are safe and accurately labeled for consumers.”

That response, Hochschart­ner said, was “insufficie­nt. “My demand is politician­s support increased funding for cultivated meat research. His letter to me didn't say that,” he said, but even if he got solid commitment­s from the entirety of Connecticu­t's congressio­nal delegation, Hochschart­ner does not plan to stop his quest.

“I'm going to want to keep on going really until cultivated meat, through increased funding for research, is cheaper to produce than slaughtere­d meat,” he said. “And then at that point I would probably switch tactics to trying to either tax slaughtere­d meat or have it outlawed.”

Hochshartn­er sends out an emailed newsletter with updates on his progress, though he said it has fewer than 50 regular readers. Go to http://slaughterf­reeamerica substack.com for informatio­n.

 ?? Jon Hochschart­ner / Contribute­d photo ?? Jon Hochschart­ner protesting outside Sen. Richard Blumenthal's office.
Jon Hochschart­ner / Contribute­d photo Jon Hochschart­ner protesting outside Sen. Richard Blumenthal's office.

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