A New Company Will Have “Fake Meat” on the Shelves Next Year

B00Mer

Make Canada Great Again
Sep 6, 2008
47,127
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Rent Free in Your Head
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A New Company Will Have “Fake Meat” on the Shelves Next Year



MEATY AMBITIONS

Hampton Creek, a startup that develops plant-based alternatives to foods that are usually produced by animals, has announced that the lab-grown meat they have been developing clandestinely over the last year will go commercial in 2018. If the timeline is accurate, the launch would come three years earlier than their closest competitor, Memphis Meats, which predicts their product will reach stores in 2021.

One of the biggest issues Hampton Creek will face in achieving this aim is the cost of “clean meat.” Although the price of lab-grown meat has fallen 99 percent in the last three years — with the first lab-grown burger costing $230,000 — it is still more expensive than farmed meat. Hampton Creek has not released any information concerning how much their product will cost.

[youtube]GOcRf96sYvQ[/youtube]

Central to the company’s product is their research into replacing the scarce fetal bovine serum that most lab-grown meats use with plant-based nutrients. Simply getting that right won’t be enough to produce a solid final product, though. As Josh Tetrick, CEO of Hampton Creek, conceded to Quartz, “Just because you’ve nailed the battery doesn’t mean you’ve nailed the electric car.”

Opinion is split as to whether the 2018 goal is achievable. Some cite Hampton Creek’s previous actions when they were developing and marketing their Just Mayo product as a reason to be skeptical. Others are more optimistic regarding Hampton Creek’s timeline — the Good Food Institute’s executive director Bruce Friedlich told Business Insider that “with the right resources, it should be achievable.”

THE CLEAN MEAT REVOLUTION

A cost-effective, price-competitive clean meat could have paradigm-shifting consequences for both the world food market and the environment. Not only would it radically reduce animal suffering, it would also decrease global emissions. The meat industry is estimated by the World Resources Institute to produce 13.5 percent of greenhouse gases worldwide, and if nothing changes, this percentage is likely to increase given that the world’s population could reach around 9.7 billion by 2050.

To combat these issues, the world has seen a surge in the production of alternative meat products, which can be split into three categories: plant-based meat, such as the pea protein-based pea burger produced by Beyond Meat; more sustainable meat sources, such as the insect meat produced by Cornish Edible Insects; and lab-grown meat, such as that proposed by Hampton Creek and Memphis Meats.

If we are to survive as a species, we must radically change how much pollution we create, and changing the way we eat is a key aspect of this. Any alternative to the environmentally damaging meat industry represents a step toward preserving humanity’s future, so let us all hope Hampton Creek’s announcement is as promising as it seems.

https://futurism.com/a-new-company-will-have-fake-meat-on-the-shelves-next-year/
 

Cliffy

Standing Member
Nov 19, 2008
44,850
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Nakusp, BC
Actually, fake meat has been around for at least 50 years or more. They make pork chops, bacon and other "meats" out of textured soy protein flavoured to taste like the real thing for vegans. Seventh Day Adventurers have been eating that crap forever cuz god said they can't eat pigs. I don't know if there are Muslims who partake of fake pork though.
 

Nanoose

Electoral Member
Jun 18, 2017
107
0
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I always figured lab meat was a good way to reduce green house gases but I didn't realize it was so expensive to produce. Thousands of dollars for a hamburger is too much and even if they got the price down by 99% it would still be expensive. Cheers!
 

Jinentonix

Hall of Fame Member
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Or as it was called years ago when they started this nonsense, "shmeat", which stood for "shit meat". Meaning it was meat, but it was crap.
 

TenPenny

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Jun 9, 2004
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"Among the hurdles still left to overcome: figuring out how to produce test-tube meat at scale, and coming up with a way to produce it that doesn’t use fetal calf serum (currently, cells are grown in the serum, which is taken from cow fetus blood)."


That should keep the vegans happy.
 

Angstrom

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May 8, 2011
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A New Company Will Have “Fake Meat” on the Shelves Next Year



MEATY AMBITIONS

Hampton Creek, a startup that develops plant-based alternatives to foods that are usually produced by animals, has announced that the lab-grown meat they have been developing clandestinely over the last year will go commercial in 2018. If the timeline is accurate, the launch would come three years earlier than their closest competitor, Memphis Meats, which predicts their product will reach stores in 2021.

One of the biggest issues Hampton Creek will face in achieving this aim is the cost of “clean meat.” Although the price of lab-grown meat has fallen 99 percent in the last three years — with the first lab-grown burger costing $230,000 — it is still more expensive than farmed meat. Hampton Creek has not released any information concerning how much their product will cost.

[youtube]GOcRf96sYvQ[/youtube]

Central to the company’s product is their research into replacing the scarce fetal bovine serum that most lab-grown meats use with plant-based nutrients. Simply getting that right won’t be enough to produce a solid final product, though. As Josh Tetrick, CEO of Hampton Creek, conceded to Quartz, “Just because you’ve nailed the battery doesn’t mean you’ve nailed the electric car.”

Opinion is split as to whether the 2018 goal is achievable. Some cite Hampton Creek’s previous actions when they were developing and marketing their Just Mayo product as a reason to be skeptical. Others are more optimistic regarding Hampton Creek’s timeline — the Good Food Institute’s executive director Bruce Friedlich told Business Insider that “with the right resources, it should be achievable.”

THE CLEAN MEAT REVOLUTION

A cost-effective, price-competitive clean meat could have paradigm-shifting consequences for both the world food market and the environment. Not only would it radically reduce animal suffering, it would also decrease global emissions. The meat industry is estimated by the World Resources Institute to produce 13.5 percent of greenhouse gases worldwide, and if nothing changes, this percentage is likely to increase given that the world’s population could reach around 9.7 billion by 2050.

To combat these issues, the world has seen a surge in the production of alternative meat products, which can be split into three categories: plant-based meat, such as the pea protein-based pea burger produced by Beyond Meat; more sustainable meat sources, such as the insect meat produced by Cornish Edible Insects; and lab-grown meat, such as that proposed by Hampton Creek and Memphis Meats.

If we are to survive as a species, we must radically change how much pollution we create, and changing the way we eat is a key aspect of this. Any alternative to the environmentally damaging meat industry represents a step toward preserving humanity’s future, so let us all hope Hampton Creek’s announcement is as promising as it seems.

https://futurism.com/a-new-company-will-have-fake-meat-on-the-shelves-next-year/

I read something on them on LinkedIn. Apparently the CEO is something of a problem. Everyone keeps quitting this company.
 

SteveM

New Member
Aug 31, 2017
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Edmonton, AB
I don't know if this qualifies as fake meat or not. GMO salmon by AquaBounty in PEI. An article in The Star says Canadians have eaten 4.5 tonnes of it so far.

When they approved AquaBounty to grow it, it was understood that it wouldn't be on the shelves in Canada, but would go to a market in the US. I read that the deal fell through, although I didn't hear why. So without anyone knowing the government approved it for sale in Canada. The government refuses to label GMO products and Health Canada says they are safe to eat.

Many GMO products are banned in Europe. Here's a list.