August 27, 2021
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Can we print meat? Indeed, we can! Simon Fried of explains on Todayâs episode is truly about future of meat.
Specifically, Simon and Elysabeth discuss,
- The cultivated meat process for unstructured meat.
- The printed meat process for structured meat.
- Why MeaTech went public before revenue and how much money was raise.
- Expected price parity with meat and when the product will be mainstream.
- Working with competitors in a growing ecosystem.
- When consumers will accept cultivated meat.
- Why Israel has been so advanced with cultivated meat.
Below is a clip and transcript from our on if the consumer will accept cultured meat. The .
Elysabeth: I donât know that people are so tied to where their meat comes from. I think they just want meat. So itâs sort of two sides of one coin. Cellular meat, cultivated meat is the death of animal agriculture. Why would you ever choose animal agriculture? Itâs so wasteful, inefficient, itâs cruel, itâs got hormones and antibiotics, pandemics, we could go on. But also I think people are quickly going to make the intellectual leap to, âItâs still meat.â What do you think about that? How long do you think it will take for the consumer to get on board?
Simon Fried: Well, as with any new technology, people are justified or understandably on the fence until proven otherwise. And itâs partly at times even a political statement as well, you know. One takes a side and- not wanting to stray too much into politics-but you can see how people deal with and how people feel about vaccinations and whether itâs good or bad and many of these things relate one to the other.
Most consumer surveys indicate that people are very excited about the thought of cultured meat typically once theyâve had the chance to understand whatâs going on and that the cells really wouldnât allow themselves to be cultivated in anything other than pretty much the environment that theyâre destined to be in naturally. And so weâre replicating a natural process just without many of the downsides. So, we fully expect people to come around as seeing this as a perfectly valid way of making something that is quite traditional.

That said, it may well be that there are aspects of this technology that could make meat even better than it is today. Maybe it might be healthier. Maybe the profiles of the fats from a saturated fat perspective could be even better. So thereâs great potential to think about not just the improvement to ethics and sustainability but it very well may be that thereâs opportunity for the nutritional side of it to be an improvement as well. And that I think might be the ultimate convincing argument where not only does it have none of the environmental downsides or the ethical downsides, but itâs actually of benefit health-wise.
[This] seems to be one of the pushbacks I think for the plant-based space where at least the number of ingredients seem to be causing people to ask questions about, you know, âHow good is this for me?â Now, each plant-based offering has its faults and theyâre different and I certainly wouldnât get into pointing fingers, but I think people tend to like ingredient lists that are short and that feel natural. And to the extent cultured meat can do that, I think it can be popular as a result.
Elysabeth: I think itâs really an exciting space, and so much to unpack here. I love what you are saying about how cultivated meat is like the early cell phone or computer or digital camera or many medicines. It is the just the beginning and these innovations will get better and better and surpass our meat system not just with sustainability and by being cruelty-free, but by being potentially healthier.
Although a point of note: itâs hard for me to have these conversations in which our current meat production is deemed ânatural.â If one thinks meat is natural, then I encourage a view at factory farm videos. They are everywhere; not hard to find. Theyâre part of American culture and global culture. So, if you think that the situation that animals find themselves in factory farms is natural then we have a different understanding of the word ânatural.â I would argue that our 99% of current meat production is completely unnatural. This is awful for animals, but also people. Who ingests the hormones, antibiotics, unwell animals and their heightened cortisol levels? Humans.
Now you can be a part of the conversation. The Plantbased Business Hour airs LIVE on LinkedIn every Tuesday at 1p PT on Elysabeth Alfanoâs LinkedIn Page: . Tune in to ask the most influential leaders in the plant-based business arena your questions. To make sure you never miss an episode, vegconomist will be also be featuring The Plantbased Business Hour interviews every Wednesday. Stay tuned right here for more. To learn more about The Plantbased Business Hour, click . Follow Elysabeth on LinkedIn and PBH .
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Source: Vegconomist.com