Singapore's Shiok Meats hopes to hook diners with lab-grown shrimp
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[February 04, 2020]
SINGAPORE (Reuters) - Shiok Meats, a
Singapore-based start-up whose name means very good in local slang, aims
to become the first company in the world to bring shrimp grown in a
laboratory to diners' plates.
Demand for meat substitutes is booming, as consumer concerns about
health, animal welfare and the environment grow. Plant-based meat
alternatives, popularized by Beyond Meat Inc and Impossible Foods,
increasingly feature on supermarket shelves and restaurant menus.
But so-called clean meat, which is genuine meat grown from cells outside
the animal, is still at a nascent stage.
More than two dozen firms are testing lab-grown fish, beef and chicken,
hoping to break into an unproven segment of the alternative meat market,
which Barclays estimates could be worth $140 billion by 2029.
Shiok grows minced meat by extracting a sample of cells from shrimp. The
cells are fed with nutrients in a solution and kept at a temperature of
28 degrees Celsius (82 degrees Fahrenheit), which helps them multiply.
The stem cells become meat in four to six weeks.
One kg (2.2 lb) of lab-grown shrimp meat now costs $5,000, says Chief
Executive Sandhya Sriram. That means a single 'siu mai' (pork and
shrimp) dumpling typically eaten in a dim sum meal would cost as much as
$300, using Shiok's shrimp.
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Sriram, a vegetarian, hopes to cut the cost to $50 per kg by the end of
this year by signing a new low-cost deal for nutrients to grow the meat
cells and expects it will fall further as the company achieves scale.
Shiok is backed by Henry Soesanto, chief executive of Philippines' Monde
Nissin Corp, which owns British meat substitute firm Quorn. It wants to
raise $5 million to fund a pilot plant in Singapore to sell to
restaurants and food suppliers.
"We are looking at next year, so we might be the first ever company to
launch a cell-based meat product in the world," Sriram said. Shiok still
needs approval from the city-state's food regulator.
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Bioreactor where the last stage of shrimp meat grown from stem cells
in the lab is taking place is seen at Shiok Meats in Singapore
January 22, 2020. Picture taken January 22, 2020. REUTERS/Travis Teo
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Cell-based meat companies also face the challenge of consumer
perception of their product.
Any alternative means of making animal protein without harming the
environment are positive, but more studies are needed to understand
any negative consequences of producing cellular protein, said Paul
Teng, a specialist in agritechnology innovations at Nanyang
Technological University.
In Singapore, some consumers said they would give lab-grown meat a
shot.
"I am willing to try," said 60-year-old Pet Loh, while she shopped
for shrimp in a Singapore market. "I may not exactly dare to eat it
frequently, but I don't mind buying and trying it because the
animals in the oceans are declining."
(Reporting by Aradhana Aravindan and Travis Teo in Singapore;
Editing by Christian Schmollinger)
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