Lab-grown meat moves closer to American dinner plates
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[January 23, 2023]
By Leah Douglas
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Once the stuff of science fiction, lab-grown meat
could become reality in some restaurants in the United States as early
as this year.
Executives at cultivated meat companies are optimistic that meat grown
in massive steel vats could be on the menu within months after one
company won the go-ahead from a key regulator. In a show of confidence,
some of them have signed up high-end chefs like Argentine Francis
Mallmann and Spaniard José Andrés to eventually showcase the meats in
their high-end eateries.
But to reach its ultimate destination - supermarket shelves - cultivated
meat faces big obstacles, five executives told Reuters. Companies must
attract more funding to increase production, which would enable them to
offer their beef steaks and chicken breasts at a more affordable price.
Along the way, they must overcome a reluctance among some consumers to
even try lab-grown meat.
Cultivated meat is derived from a small sample of cells collected from
livestock, which is then fed nutrients, grown in enormous steel vessels
called bioreactors, and processed into something that looks and tastes
like a real cut of meat.
Just one country, Singapore, has so far approved the product for retail
sale. But the United States is poised to follow. The U.S. Food and Drug
Administration (FDA) said in November that a cultivated meat product - a
chicken breast grown by California-based UPSIDE Foods - was safe for
human consumption.
UPSIDE is now hoping to bring its product to restaurants as soon as 2023
and to grocery stores by 2028, its executives told Reuters.
UPSIDE still needs to be inspected by the U.S. Department of
Agriculture's Food Safety and Inspection Service and get sign-off from
the agency on its labels. A USDA FSIS spokesperson declined to comment
on its inspection timeline.
`SLAUGHTERLESS HOUSE`
At UPSIDE's facility in Emeryville, California, lab coat-clad workers
were seen poring over touch screens and monitoring giant vats of water
mixed with nutrients during a recent Reuters visit. Meat is harvested
and processed in a room that chief executive officer Uma Valeti calls
the "slaughterless house," where it is inspected and tested.
Reuters reporters were served a sample of UPSIDE's chicken during the
visit. It tasted just like conventional chicken when cooked, though was
somewhat thinner and had a more uniform tan color when raw.
UPSIDE worked with the FDA for four years before receiving the agency's
green light in November, Valeti told Reuters.
"It’s a watershed moment for the industry," he said.
California-based cultivated meat company GOOD Meat already has an
application pending with the FDA, which has not been previously
reported. Two other companies, Netherlands-based Mosa Meat and
Israel-based Believer Meats, said they are in discussions with the
agency, company executives told Reuters.
The FDA declined to provide details of pending cultivated meat
applications but confirmed it is talking to multiple companies.
Regulatory approval is just the first hurdle for making cultivated meat
accessible to a broad swath of consumers, executives at UPSIDE, Mosa
Meat, Believer Meats, and GOOD Meat told Reuters.
The biggest challenge companies face is growing the nascent supply chain
for the nutrient mix to feed cells and for the massive bioreactors
required to produce large quantities of cultivated meat, executives
said.
For now, production is limited. UPSIDE’s facility has the capacity to
churn out 400,000 pounds of cultivated meat per year – a small fraction
of the 106 billion pounds of conventional meat and poultry produced in
the United States in 2021, according to the North American Meat
Institute, a meat industry lobby group.
If the companies cannot get the funds needed to scale up production,
their product may never reach a price point where it can compete with
conventional meat, said GOOD Meat co-founder Josh Tetrick.
“Selling is different than selling a lot,” Tetrick said. “Until we as a
company and other companies build large-scale infrastructure, this is
going to be very small scale.”
SCALING WOES
The cultivated meat sector has so far raised nearly $2 billion in
investments globally, according to data collected by the Good Food
Institute (GFI), a research group focused on alternatives to
conventional meat.
But it will take hundreds of millions of dollars for GOOD Meat, for
example, to build bioreactors of the size needed to make its meat at
scale, Tetrick said.
Investment in the industry so far has been led by venture capital firms
and major food companies like JBS SA, Tyson Foods Inc, and
Archer-Daniels-Midland Co.
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A logo of The UPSIDE Foods plant, where
lab-grown meat is cultivated, is seen in Emeryville, California,
U.S. January 11, 2023. REUTERS/Peter DaSilva
JBS spokesperson Nikki Richardson said the company's investments in
cultivated meat "are consistent with our efforts to build a
diversified global food portfolio of traditional, plant-based and
alternative protein product offerings."
Tyson did not respond to a request for comment. ADM declined to
comment.
Much of that money has been directed toward the United States, the
No. 1 target for cultivated meat makers because of its size and
wealth, said Jordan Bar Am, a partner at McKinsey & Company who
focuses on alternative proteins.
Some companies are scaling up U.S. production even before their
products have been approved by regulators.
Believer Meats plans to build a facility in North Carolina, set to
be commissioned in early 2024, that could produce 22 million pounds
of meat annually, chief executive officer Nicole Johnson-Hoffman
said. And GOOD Meat has plans to build out its production in
California and Singapore to as much as 30 million pounds annually.
The European Union along with Israel and other countries are also
working on regulatory frameworks for cultivated meat but have not
yet approved a product for human consumption.
THE `ICK` FACTOR
Cultivated meat companies plan to pitch consumers that their product
is greener and more ethical than conventional livestock, while
attempting to overcome an aversion to their product among some
shoppers.
For one, their product does not involve animal slaughter, which
companies hope will make the product appealing to people who avoid
meat for moral reasons. Animals are unharmed in the cell collection
process, company executives told Reuters.
Another draw is that growing meat in a steel vessel instead of in a
field could reduce the environmental impact of livestock, which are
responsible for 14.5% of the world’s greenhouse gas emissions
through feed production, deforestation, manure management, and
enteric fermentation - animal burps - according to the United
Nations' Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO).
Plant-based meat companies have also appealed to consumers with
moral and environmental claims, though the sector has captured just
1.4% of the meat market, according to a GFI report.
But cultivated meat companies have the advantage that they can claim
their product is real meat, Tetrick said.
“Probably the single biggest thing we’ve learned is that people
really love meat. They’re probably not going to eat a whole lot less
of it,” he said.
Still, a lot of people are grossed out by cultivated meat, said
Janet Tomiyama, a health psychologist at the University of
California, Los Angeles, who studies human diets.
In a 2022 study published in the Journal of Environmental
Psychology, she found that 35% of meat eaters and 55% of vegetarians
would be too disgusted to try cultivated meat.
Some people may perceive the meat to be "unnatural" and have a
negative attitude about it before even trying it, she said.
To attract hesitant shoppers, companies need to be as clear as
possible about how their product is made and that it's safe to eat,
said Tetrick, whose company has sold its product at restaurants in
Singapore.
"You’ve got to be transparent about it, but in a way that’s still
appetizing," he said.
UPSIDE Foods and GOOD Meat plan to whet American palates by
releasing their products at high-end restaurants first once
approved, they told Reuters, betting that consumers there will
tolerate a higher price point and have a good first impression of
their meat.
UPSIDE hopes to get its products into grocery stores in the next
three to five years, CEO Valeti said.
Major U.S. supermarket chains did not respond to Reuters requests
for comment.
Restaurateur Andrés, known for his work on global food security,
told Reuters he wants to sell cultivated meat because of its
environmental benefits.
"We can see in what is happening all around us, in every country
around the globe, that our planet is in crisis," he said.
Fellow chef Mallmann, known for his preparations of meat and other
foods on outdoor flames, told Reuters he is also influenced by
environmental considerations and sees the role of chefs as making
the product more gastronomically appealing and less scientific.
“We have to add romance to it,” he said.
(Reporting by Leah Douglas, editing by Richard Valdmanis and Ross
Colvin)
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