Where's the Meat?
We love our meat in America. On average, we consume about 26 Billion pounds of beef a year. And it is projected that by the end of 2018, Americans will consume an average of over 200 pounds of meat a year!
Unfortunately, animal production requires a lot of natural resources. A single cow consumes an average of 11,000 gallons of water a year, which is about 30 Gallons a day. Our human bodies only require a little less than a gallon a day.. which equates to only 365 gallons a year.
We already face a serious global water shortage. "By 2025, two-thirds of the world's population may be facing water shortages."
"An estimated 14.5% of the planet’s global warming emissions stem from from the production and consumption of livestock – more than from the entire transport sector"
Companies like JUST and Finless Foods are paving the way towards in-vitro meat and seafood production. It sounds like something out of the future, but is quickly approaching its way to the market.
And it's not just meat, clean sustainable seafood is also making significant strides. Fish consumption continues to increase, but over 50% of the Earth's fish stocks are fully exploited. Meaning there is no chance of recovery. In addition, the polluting of the ocean continues to increase the heavy-metal toxicity, such as mercury, in fish.
At Finless Foods, their mission is to make fish production as efficient as possible. Aquaculture is a step in the right direction, but it is too costly and inefficient.
Not to mention the fuel, pesticides, and fertilizer that animal production also requires. As carbon dioxide, global temperatures, and ocean acidification levels rise, our planet cannot continue to afford to sustain the rate of animal production to feed the global population. Especially when the global population continues to increase. By 2050, the global population is expected to increase to 10Billion people.
As the global population rises, we cannot afford the polluted water and loss of biodiversity.
How Does this Work?
The techniques vary from lab to lab, but the main idea is the same. You take a piece of meat, filter certain cells from it that can form into different 'lineages,' and then trick those cells into thinking they are with a host(the animal).
They trick the cells by providing the right amounts of common nutrients like salts, sugars, water, amino acids, vitamins, and other minerals to perfect the varying cell lines. Once a cell line is established in an efficient manner, they no longer need the animal.
It tastes like meat, because it's the same meat.
The FDA states that "it seems reasonable to think that cultured meat, if manufactured with safety standards and regulations, could be safe to consume."
Apart from the cost and environmental benefit of clean meat, it will also help reduce food-borne illnesses. 48 million people get sick from a food borne illnesses a year. The meat is contaminated during the slaughter processes, which results in intestinal cross-contamination.
Clean meat even has the potential to modify the meat to include more heart healthy fats like omega 3 and omega 6. Lab grown meat is the equivalent to fermenting yeast into beer.
We Could be Consuming Clean Meat by the end of 2018
Let's put this in perspective. The first in-vitro hamburger cost ~$330,000 in 2013. Now, it costs about $11 for a hamburger.
Naturally, most people are apprehensive to the idea of eating lab grown meat. However, a recent poll taken in 2017 stated that 1/3 of people would be willing to consume clean meat.
And it's not just the changing public attitudes, meat monopolies like Tyson Foods and Cargill are already investing in clean meat. They are the kings of their industry, and it looks like they also see a future with in-vitro meat. Prominent entrepreneurs like Richard Branson and Bill Gates are also investing in clean meat techniques.
Josh Tetrick, the CEO of Just, was quoted saying that we would see chicken nuggets, foie gras, and sausage in a number of restaurants by the end of this year
Their mission is bigger than just meat. Their mission is to change our mindsets about sustainable, healthy foods. They want to revolutionize the food industry by promoting a "fair, honest, and just food system in every community."
Are you ready for clean meat?
I think it's weird and unnatural, but so is the way animals are farmed now. Given the environmental impact of producing meat and society as a whole's apparent inabilty to consider any other way of life, I think lab grown meat makes sense. Realistically, it's not even going to be possible to maintain the current level of meat consumption as the population continues to also rise. On the other hand, I think it remains to be seen how long civilization will continue to exist. :)
Human beings do not need to eat animal meat for their protein intake. There are other suitable sustenance in the world that can supply the human race with protein. Technically, human can survive off of vitamin and mineral pills, liquids, even coma patients are fed intravenously for years without chewing on a full meal.
The idea that we need animal meat is a want and not necessarily a need. It is a addiction and of the mind and if we are to move away from the environmental effects of the booming food production and commercial fishing, people need to realize that all we need to survive is the nutrients and not necessarily the commercialized farming aspect that we have been brain washed to accept.