Cultured meat to feed the world

by: Mirjam Visser, 2013-08-05 12:23:24 UTC
Sustainability Aspects: 99% less environmental impact tasting exactly the same as grown on a cow.

The cultured hamburger

Unusual here but since meat production has a hugh environmental and animal welfare impact I thought it on its place to talk about food. And it is designed as any product discussed here. Today Mark Post of Maastricht University in the Netherlands presented the burger (40 billion cells) made from one cow muscle cell! In 3 months time, which is faster as a cow grows in a hamburger. And it needs less than 1% of the space the cow needs without the greenhouse gasses the cow produces!

Cultured Beef is created by harvesting one muscle cells from a living cow. Scientists then feed and nurture the cells so they multiply to create muscle tissue, which is the main component of the meat we eat. It is biologically exactly the same as the meat tissue that comes from a cow. Mind you it is fat free.
The Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO) estimates that the demand for meat is going to increase by more than two-thirds in the next 40 years and current production methods are not sustainable. In the near future both meat and other staple foods are likely to become expensive luxury items, thanks to the increased demand on crops for meat production, unless we find a sustainable alternative.

Livestock contributes to global warming through unchecked releases of methane, a greenhouse gas 20 times more potent than carbon dioxide. The increase in demand will significantly increase levels of methane, carbon dioxide and nitrous oxide and cause loss of biodiversity.

Cultured Beef is likely a more sustainable option that will change the way we eat and think about food forever.

How Cultured Beef is made
Cultured Beef is created by painlessly harvesting muscle cells from a living cow. Scientists then feed and nurture the cells so they multiply to create muscle tissue, which is the main component of the meat we eat. It is biologically exactly the same as the meat tissue that comes from a cow.

The cells grow into strands. 20,000 of these small strands of meat are then combined to create one normal sized hamburger.

The benefits
Although Mark Post’s burger is only intended as a proof of concept and it will be a while before Cultured Beef appears on supermarket shelves research already points to its potential.

Research carried out at the University of Oxford suggests that producing Cultured Beef could use as much as 99% less space than what is needed for current livestock farming methods. Research also points to greenhouse gas emissions and other environmental impacts for Cultured Beef being substantially lower than beef from modern farming.

Designer: Mark Post
Manufacturer: Maastricht University
Category: meat
Websites: culturedbeef.net/

Images

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The cultured hamburger
Da615d50-dff7-0130-9bf0-4040823e9e3d
The cultured hamburger
by Mark Post

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