Tyson is betting that consumers will — eventually — crave lab-grown meat

I wonder if Hardscrabble Farmer will have an opinion about this article. 🙂

Via Marketwatch

The world’s first cultured chicken kebab from Future Meat Technologies, which just received funding from Tyson Ventures.

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Dining habits have changed a lot over recent decades, but are consumers ready for meat produced in a lab?

Future Meat Technologies thinks they are. The Jerusalem-based biotechnology company is using muscle and fat cells from animals to make meat that’s not genetically modified — and can pass the sniff test.

“Animal fat produces the unique aroma and flavor of meat that makes our mouth water,” said Yaakov Nahmias, chief scientist at Future Meat and a professor at The Hebrew University of Jerusalem, in a statement.

According to Nahmias, Future Meat is producing its “cultured meat” in environments that mimic animal physiology using giant vats, or bioreactors, that grow the meat cost-efficiently. The cultured meat is made in a disposable plastic bag much like the IV bags you’d see in a hospital, which are then used as the product wrapping.

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Currently, Future Meat makes chicken and is working on beef.

Tyson Foods Inc. TSN, +0.63%  , which is known for conventional meat production from chickens and other livestock, announced last week that its wholly-owned subsidiary, Tyson Ventures, has co-led a $2.2 million investment in Future Meat. While that might seem counterintuitive, the company says the world’s growing population has a taste for protein, and the traditional methods won’t always be able to satisfy the demand.

The average diner might not find that appetizing, but then again, the traditional way of harvesting the meat that consumers find neatly shrink-wrapped at the grocer isn’t that great either, he told MarketWatch.

Future Meat Technologies
Chef Uri Navon forming FMT’s world first cultured chicken kebab

“You’re packing thousands of chickens onto a truck where they’re defecating on each other,” he said. “Then it’s to a meat processing plant where they’re slaughtered by the hundreds of thousands.”

Add to that any contamination when the animals aren’t cleaned properly, and the thought of that chicken dinner could make your stomach turn, literally and figuratively.

“The time when we used to have chickens running around in a little farmhouse has been gone for a while,” Nahmias said.

Instead, he says, market research shows that consumers are excited for the technology that will make killing animals unnecessary and improve the safety of the food we eat.

“My mom used to make me schnitzel,” Nahmias said. “I want to make my kids and grandkids schnitzel. If we don’t change the way we eat, we can’t have the same things.”

The way we’ve been eating may become a thing of the past whether we want it to or not. According to the Tyson Ventures website, 60% of consumers are trying to add protein to their diets. The world population is expected to increase by one billion by 2030. Production would have to ramp up to keep pace with these figures.

“We think conventional meat will continue to grow,” said Reese Schroeder, managing director of Tyson Ventures. “We are also looking at different ways that protein can be brought to people. We’re looking towards developing all forms of protein to meet this demand.”

The group says it is already seeing a positive response to plant-based alternatives.

Tyson Ventures has also invested in a cultured-meat startup, Memphis Meats, and Beyond Meat, which sells plant-based proteins like Beyond Sausage “that looks, sizzles, and satisfies like pork.”

The group is also interested in the “internet of food,” investing in things like big data and “the connected kitchen.” Schroeder summed up the category as the “different business models, and the different ways that people get food,” from food trucks to meal kits.

Nahmias cites growth in vegetarianism and no-meat days as an indication of how open diners have become to plates that don’t have an animal component. But cultured meat presents its own challenges: getting people comfortable with meat that grew in a sac at a time when more consumers are looking for “natural” and “authentic” foods could be difficult.

“People are always reluctant to try new things,” Schroeder said.

Sixty percent of consumers (69% of women and 51% of men) said they would be hesitant to eat lab-grown beef, said Lizzy Freier, managing editor at Technomic, quoting the group’s 2018 Center of the Plate study. Technomic is a data and analytics provider for the food industry.

Nearly the same percentage, 57%, said they’d be hesitant to eat pork from a lab.

Future Meat Technologies
Future Meat’s first cultured chicken kebab on grilled eggplant and tahini sauce at the Machneyuda restaurant

 

“With trends like this that are so seemingly off-the-wall for most people, the more consumers are educated and the more time passes that increasingly more operators and suppliers start to pick up on it (and in turn continue to educate their customers), the more likely consumers will change their minds on it,” she said.

Part of getting people to change their minds will be bringing down the price. Future Meat says cultured meat now costs about $10,000 per kilogram. The company’s goal is to get the price down to $5-to-$10 per kilogram.

In the meantime, Tyson plans to continue its investment in conventional meat. And Nahmias thinks there will always be a market for high-end meat products, like Kobe beef. But producing everyday burgers, chicken wings and pork chops can’t continue as it has.

“I think we need to dramatically improve common meat production,” he said.

Tyson reported a sales and earnings miss on Monday. Shares are down 17.4% for the year so far while the S&P 500 index SPX, +0.23%   is up 0.1% for the period.

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37 Comments
MrLiberty
MrLiberty
May 9, 2018 11:35 am

Given how all “factory-farmed” animals are raised, fed, treated, etc. this is certainly a positive move, but as with every science “creation,” it can never be the same as what god/mother nature creates. And then there is always the concern over what else will end up in the meat.

Westcoastdeplorable
Westcoastdeplorable
  MrLiberty
May 9, 2018 10:24 pm

Soylent Green is people!

Dutchman
Dutchman
May 9, 2018 11:58 am

Let me know when they can grow vaginas.

Anonymous
Anonymous
  Dutchman
May 9, 2018 11:59 am

Maybe you should look into the new sex robots.

Dutchman
Dutchman
  Anonymous
May 9, 2018 12:10 pm

I’ve been married 47 years. I’ve been having sex with a robot for about the last 7 years.

Stucky
Stucky
  Dutchman
May 9, 2018 12:20 pm

“I’ve been married 47 years. I’ve been having sex with a robot for about the last 7 years.”

And your wife has been using a big black dildo for 14 years.

Dutchman
Dutchman
  Stucky
May 9, 2018 12:31 pm

How did you know?

diogenes
diogenes
  Dutchman
May 9, 2018 12:43 pm

I know how to improve your sex life. Purchase a strobe light. When you turn it on during sex, it makes it look like she’s moving. Works for me.

Anonymous
Anonymous
May 9, 2018 12:01 pm

I wonder how vegetarians will receive this, and what arguments they might make both to the pro and con side of it.

Iska Waran
Iska Waran
  Anonymous
May 9, 2018 12:09 pm

If you ask them, don’t forget to point out that Hitler was a vegetarian.

AC
AC
  Iska Waran
May 9, 2018 11:24 pm

Hey, nobody is perfect.

Iconoclast421
Iconoclast421
May 9, 2018 12:07 pm

In the end its just proteins and fats. As long as there’s plenty of fat in the meat it should be good.

Stucky
Stucky
  Iconoclast421
May 9, 2018 12:22 pm

“In the end its just proteins and fats. As long as there’s plenty of fat in the meat it should be good.”

Huh? What??

So all fats are identical? One fat is the same as any other fat?

Iska Waran
Iska Waran
May 9, 2018 12:10 pm

Will it be cheaper than normal meat?

Hope@ZeroKelvin - I am the Proud Deplorable Majority
Hope@ZeroKelvin - I am the Proud Deplorable Majority
May 9, 2018 12:38 pm

Having actually worked in a lab, made monoclonal antibodies and a cDNA library, used animals in research, I can assure you that labs are hardly more tidy or as compliant with regulations as factory farming seems to be.

I would be very surprised if the EROEI of lab grown meat will make it economically viable without huge tax incentives (see: Tesla), or a huge pool of snooty food snobs willing to pay huge bucks for the novelty.

(Although if lab grown meat spontaneously combusts like Tesla cars, you could have a built in BBQ!!! A win-win.)

diogenes
diogenes

Solent Green is People !!!

Unappetizing
Unappetizing
  diogenes
May 9, 2018 2:32 pm
Westcoastdeplorable
Westcoastdeplorable

Hi Hope, glad to see you’ve changed your name like me (formerly Westcoaster).

Martin brundlefly
Martin brundlefly
May 9, 2018 12:47 pm

Ee gads nasty. Factory farmed not much better. Prefer the farmers market, but who knows what you get unless you do it yourself, which is also nasty.

kitster
kitster
May 9, 2018 1:01 pm

Most people I talk with don’t seem to understand nor do they care much about the reality of farmed seafood or contained raised meats/poultry. They certainly do not understand the nutritional differences. Leaves more wild caught, cage free, & pasture raised goodies for those of us so inclined! I have lived long enough to decide that the test tube does not always deliver a better product.

MadMike
MadMike
May 9, 2018 1:06 pm

Embrace the tech.
Eventually we’ll be able to have an assortment of vats built like a refrigerator, and grow our own.
Luddites need not apply.

billy bob
billy bob
May 9, 2018 1:11 pm

farmed seafood?
like those sewage ponds in the Philippines, that they treat with antibiotics, so the shrimp will eat the pig shit they use as feed stock?

Cause that’s what we are eating for dinner.

Mary Christine
Mary Christine
May 9, 2018 2:26 pm

So glad I ate lunch before I read this.

Lab meat, yuk.

Factory meat, yuk.

Grow your own and slaughter yourself, yuk.

Be a vegetarian, well that sucks, too. The brain needs cholesterol from fat.

I guess we could learn to kill the chicken and fry it fresh. It’s true that it’s yucky but it’s how our farming grandparents did it.

Wip
Wip
May 9, 2018 2:47 pm

Haha,

Profit at any cost + overpopulation.

LaGeR
LaGeR
May 9, 2018 3:10 pm

Last Saturday, was tooling around Hobe Sound, FLA, enjoying the beauty. Come 5:00, we were looking for a pub with a TV to catch the running of the Kentucky Derby. Saddled up to the bar at Flash Beach Grill. Met the owner & his wife. Great people. I had a view past the bar, into his kitchen prep / cooking area. Watched as he took a fresh, 2 ft. long grouper, and masterfully filet it. I wasn’t even that hungry, but asked for a piece of that to be grilled, with some fire smoked veggies. No less than 10 different veggies. All backed up with a pint of Yuingling draught.
The night before, we had Chilean Sea Bass at a bistro (Spritz?) in Stuart that was outstanding. But the meal at Flash Beach was even better. Can’t remember how much, but it was reasonable.
I’d take meals like that over bag ‘o meat any day.
Apologies, for posting something one might typically read on FB or Yelp.
But this fresh catch food story fits here.
If you’re ever in So. Florida, hit either place for a casual, laid back dinner. They had 2 musicians playing guitar on stage near the outdoor patio seating at Flash.
Thatched roof, tiki bar decor.
Wish I lived in that area.

Trapped in Portlandia
Trapped in Portlandia
May 9, 2018 4:32 pm

You gotta love food corporations like Tyson. The way they deal with people’s displeasure with their factory farming methods is to simply eliminate the farming part of the equation.

Hey Tyson, we wanted to eliminate the factory from the food chain, not farming part.

hardscrabble farmer
hardscrabble farmer
May 9, 2018 6:39 pm

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hardscrabble farmer
hardscrabble farmer
May 9, 2018 7:00 pm

Do people look like they give a damn about what they eat? They certainly don’t care what they watch, who they vote for, what they believe in, how they dress, where they shop, what they spend, what matters in life- stop me if you’ve heard this before.

This is what people deserve. I love how they put the little chopped parsley in that glop to make it appear like a food, but lets be honest, this is isn’t food in the same way Tang isn’t orange juice or Pink isn’t a singer. It’s a close approximation to what people have slowly dumbed themselves down into thinking was food. Ever look at a McNugget and really contemplate what that is? It’s chicken in the same way a feather pillow is a duck.

When you take livestock out of the environment- like they have for the last 50 years or so and turn them into industrial widgets, you rob the soil of a vital component. When you stop feeding soil you render it sterile. When soil is dead it cannot filter water. The list goes on and on. Nature is not a factory and whatever you do to try and shortchange natural systems the more you set up for a catastrophe.

This tells you everything that you need to know about what they think of you and the world you live in. They think you’re stupid, that you have no taste, no discernment, that you’ll gobble up whatever slop they put in front of you. You think this is the end of it? You’ll wish that Soylent Green was a product because at least it came from something that was once alive. They’ll feed you chicken feathers and goat shit if they can get away with it and they will eventually try and get away with it but by then there won’t be any alternatives left. All the farmers will be gone or the ones that are left won’t be able to sell anything to you.

I spent the better part of the day packing up cured meats and maple syrup to send to my customers- and if you’re one of them I really want you to take your time and enjoy it when it comes. Know that we raised those animals from birth until harvest and then took the time to butcher them carefully, to cure each cut individually, by hand, using nothing but sea salt, herbs, homemade wine and time to produce wonderfully flavored, completely healthy and ecologically responsible food, that’s right, FOOD, to nourish and bring joy to people who enjoy flavor and texture, not just a belly full of empty calories. The income that you so graciously agreed to exchange for what we produced isn’t going into some GloboCorp that works diligently to produce an ever cheaper, ever more revolting product that will eventually kill you as it fills their coffers with even more money.

I should be shocked by this, but I’m beyond that now. It’s up to whatever tiny fraction of the human population that still has the grit and determination to outlast these monsters and see to it that at least a few of us will outlast our psychopathic masters as they daily heap fuel on the bonfire that was our civilization.

Stucky
Stucky
  hardscrabble farmer
May 9, 2018 8:01 pm

I love it when you get all worked up!!!!!!!!!!!!!

Folks, this very morning I had two organic eggs (sunny side up), sprouted bread toast, squeezed oranges for orange juice ….. and sliced up some pepperoni-ish meat from HF’s farm which was ABSOLUTELY AMAZINGLY DELICIOUS!!!!

In a way, it’s kind of bad/sad for me. I will never, and I mean never, be able to eat mass produced pepperoni again. I am not kidding. Not that I am a large quantity pepperoni eater, but still, him and my benefactor just kinda fucked up my life.

Hey, HF! Are you willing to let us know exactly the Date and Place where you will be in Brooklyn? There’s a few of us here in the area who wouldn’t mind making a trip to see you and your stuff.

Stucky
Stucky
  hardscrabble farmer
May 9, 2018 8:07 pm

To HF, and other farmers out there …

There are 7+ BILLION people in the world. Estimates are that by around 2050 there will be TEN BILLION.

Can your method of farming feed that many people? I honestly don’t know the answer so, TIA.

(My SWAG GUESS is “no” … hence factory farming, GMO shit monster “foods”, and god-knows-what-the-fuck-else will be coming ….)

hardscrabble farmer
hardscrabble farmer
  Stucky
May 9, 2018 9:04 pm

That’s a fair question and the answer is both yes and no.

No, traditional farmers who account for less than 2% of the population cannot possibly feed 10 billion human beings when who throw away 1/3 of the food produced and with 40% of that number consuming enough calories to be classified as obese.

The questions we should be asking are the following:

1) What is the end to human population growth? Are we to continue to grow in numbers until such time as we all face a self-created extinction level event? Is there any way to limit our population growth?

2) Does it make any sense to live in a world where 99% of the population is completely dependent upon the efforts of 1% for something as fundamental as the food we eat?

3) What are the actual costs of industrial agriculture and what happens when a complex system faces an unexpected failure of one or more of it’s parts with nothing to replace that complex system?

4) What happens if all the skills and knowledge associated with traditional farming are lost due to the complete transformation of a sustainable system to one of complete dependency on industrial models that may collapse for any variety of reasons?

It has been proven time and time again that huge populations can easily be fed using nothing but traditional methods.

There are far too many problems with the current course we are embarked upon and the only thing that I am completely certain of is that it is simply a matter of time before the questions I have posed above are going to be answered in a way no one will be ready for. Our dependence upon a completely unsustainable system in tandem with unchecked human population growth are only one event away from becoming a global catastrophe that will only be worse as each day passes without addressing the core issues.

We eat too much, we waste too much, food isn’t cheap when it is subsidized at numerous levels and the health care costs resulting from our dependence upon processed, herbicide and pesticide laced foods that come from wrecked soils and depleted aquifers are not taken into account. We are living in a completely false paradigm and the only response to those who point out the obvious is denial.

And thanks for trying the stuff we sent, I was really hoping you’d enjoy it. I will definitely let you know when I’m headed down to Soddom on the Hudson so we can hook up.

Stucky
Stucky
  hardscrabble farmer
May 10, 2018 10:38 am

I know I already TIA (thanked in advance) …. but, thanks for the answer. Actually, thanks for the questions you raised in your post …. I had never considered some of those questions. Good food for thought (pun intended). Always learning new stuff on TBP, especially from you.

Soddom on the Hudson? hahaha, good one. Looking forward to it!

KaD
KaD
May 9, 2018 10:04 pm

Hell to the power of NO. There’s another experiment with vat grown fake meat, that one didn’t work out too well either. https://www.prevention.com/eatclean/vegetarian-meat-dangers

AC
AC
May 9, 2018 11:28 pm

I’m having to spend an increasing amount of time finding ways of getting food that isn’t poisonous crap. Manufactured fake meat is not an improvement.

Boat Guy
Boat Guy
May 10, 2018 7:18 am

Here we go “MYSTERY MEAT” brought to you by CIRCLE JERK ENTERPRISE . Never mind what’s in it just swallow it , the government says it’s safe … LMAO

KeyserSusie
KeyserSusie
May 10, 2018 11:29 am

I spent yesterday fishing the bottom from 1900 to 300 feet in search of good protein. A nice catch of Tile fish, golden and blue line await my filet knife.

When I was in Viet Nam in 2002 I traveled by way of a van driver from Saigon to the North. My companions were my gf and her VN native mother. And some relatives of hers. Who were non english speaking. Among our gringo preparations we had brought along american canned tuna, white albacore as a source of “safe” food to eat on the road. We opened one can and shared it with the others. One teen aged boy immediately spit out the tuna, making an expression like my 5th grade friend made when he tried eel in seaweed, almost puking.
But tadpoles and pollywogs were everywhere in markets. And bugs too.

I wonder how much mercury is contained in the deep water denizens destined for my dinner plate.

I like Bill Murray’s (Phil Connors’) take on food favorites from one of my favorite movies.
“People are morons”