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Ready For Meat Grown From Animal Cells? A Startup Plans A Pilot Facility (npr.org) 111

Memphis Meats, a Berkeley, Calif.-based startup, says it's one step closer to bringing cell-based meat to consumers' mouths. From a report: The company plans to build a pilot production facility with funds raised from high-profile investors including Bill Gates, Richard Branson and Kimbal Musk, as well as two giant players in the animal protein and feed space, Cargill and Tyson Foods. The company says its latest funding round has brought in $161 million in new investment. "People thought this was all science fiction" when the company was founded back in 2015, Uma Valeti, the co-founder and CEO of Memphis Meats, told NPR in an interview at the company's headquarters. "Everything that we've done at Memphis Meats [has] started to show that this can be done," Valeti said. "This is real."

Interest in cell-based meat production and other meat alternatives has increased amid growing awareness of the environmental impact of traditional livestock agriculture. Valeti and his team walked us through the process of producing cell-based meat. It starts with the selection of specific types of animal cells that can grow to become meat. Next, the cells are fed and put in a "cultivator" -- similar to a fermenting tank â" where they can grow and form muscle and connective tissue. The process is analogous to the way breweries grow yeast cells to produce beer. Only here, they're growing animal cells.

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Ready For Meat Grown From Animal Cells? A Startup Plans A Pilot Facility

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  • This is such an obviously perfect delivery method for DNA targeted bioweapons deployed en masse to save the world for consumerism. The sooner the better
    • This is such an obviously perfect delivery method for DNA targeted bioweapons deployed en masse to save the world for consumerism. The sooner the better

      Yeah, or you could just put shit like HFCS into the food supply, and do the same damn thing.

      Let's stop pretending 40,000 obesity-related deaths per month in the US somehow isn't by design. Government subsidies speak volumes.

      • Re:Can't wait (Score:5, Insightful)

        by cayenne8 ( 626475 ) on Thursday January 23, 2020 @03:14PM (#59648402) Homepage Journal
        Hey, if people wanna eat this stuff, more power too them.

        Just make sure and label it CLEARLY....I personally don't want to be a guinea pig in this experiment, and, not only that...I'm perfectly happy eating dead animals like my ancestors have for years.

        • Hey, if people wanna eat this stuff, more power too them.

          Just make sure and label it CLEARLY....I personally don't want to be a guinea pig in this experiment, and, not only that...I'm perfectly happy eating dead animals like my ancestors have for years.

          And when you demand ingredients be labeled CLEARLY do you also mean including the words "probable carcinogen" if that's proven? Just curious how much actual transparency you're demanding here.

          Knowing the ingredients is a minor part of this problem. Knowing how those ingredients are going to impact human health is a hell of a lot more important. Suppress the facts around those ingredients, and it won't matter how smart or dumb you are when reading labels.

          • And when you demand ingredients be labeled CLEARLY do you also mean including the words "probable carcinogen" if that's proven? Just curious how much actual transparency you're demanding here.

            Knowing the ingredients is a minor part of this problem. Knowing how those ingredients are going to impact human health is a hell of a lot more important. Suppress the facts around those ingredients, and it won't matter how smart or dumb you are when reading labels.

            In this case, I'm asking at least for DEAD SIMPLE.

            • And when you demand ingredients be labeled CLEARLY do you also mean including the words "probable carcinogen" if that's proven? Just curious how much actual transparency you're demanding here.

              Knowing the ingredients is a minor part of this problem. Knowing how those ingredients are going to impact human health is a hell of a lot more important. Suppress the facts around those ingredients, and it won't matter how smart or dumb you are when reading labels.

              In this case, I'm asking at least for DEAD SIMPLE.

              ON the package it should clearly say LAB GROWN if this 'meat' is sold so it won't be confused with product cut from a dead animal.

              Yes, I know there will be all sorts of legalese and 101 different ways for them to try to brand and describe the contents....but something simple like they do for seafood where they have to label the country of origin.

              Real traditional dead animal meat or Lab Grown "meat".

              Maybe just not allow them to call the Lab Grown stuff 'meat'...give it a different official name.

              Soylent comes to mind, but that does have connotations.

              ;P

              It's ironic that you really feel the answer is truly that simple; lab grown or not. As if that whole "not" part is a 100% organic, grass-fed, free-range product, and not some chemically-riddled steriod-grown experiment grown in a CAFO, with all those horrors legally protected from being revealed to a meat-consuming population that constantly wonders why they're sick all the damn time.

              Go ahead. Try and tour a CAFO. IF you were actually allowed to, you would probably be seeking out Soylent-based products,

  • I've tried the plant based "meats" and while they are fine, and can be tasty, they are not meat and don't really substitute for it.

    I think growing meat from cells has a lot of promise, for delivering real meat products that could actually be really tasty.

    I imagine though it might take them a while to where they could really product good replicas of higher-end meats...

    • by hey! ( 33014 )

      I agree it's a promising technology, but with the proviso that nutrition is really complicated and for that reason engineered artificial foods don't exactly have a great track record.

      • by rtb61 ( 674572 )

        The meat is not the problem, it is the bit they are pretending does not exist, the additions of all sorts of hormones to stimulate growth. With those hormones left in for consumers to consume.

        • Cultured meat will not need hormones or antibiotics. It can be advertised as cleaner meat than farm-raised.

        • You mean "added" hormones, right? Because all living creatures produce hormones, that's part of how they (we) work. Even plants do.
    • Imagine, Now we can legitimately eat all kinds of exotic meats without ethical,issues. Whale can be on the menu again. Cat. Shark. Dog. Snake. Monkey. Giraffe. Rhinoceros. Mammoth.

      Or, for the truly daring, Human. Anything is possible.

      Wow. This is going to be a Gourmet Paradise.

      • by cusco ( 717999 )

        Saw a debate between some vegans about whether factory grown meat would qualify for the vegan diet since no animals were harmed. One decided that it would be OK, but the other maintained that it would only be all right if you were eating your own cloned cells and not some other animals.

  • this is dumb! (Score:2, Interesting)

    by SirAstral ( 1349985 )

    Science cannot replace the well establish optimum method!

    We need to increase "responsible meat production" not move it into a fucking lab where Intellectual Property laws are going to totally fuck this up.

    Remember Monsanto! It will be the same mutherfucking thing!
    As usually, the morons are going to completely support a solution that is going to ensure the problem they are trying to avoid will get worse!

    Meat production needs to have a responsible full life-cycle management process. Every time we fuck with

    • Re: this is dumb! (Score:4, Insightful)

      by backslashdot ( 95548 ) on Thursday January 23, 2020 @02:33PM (#59648228)

      Depends on your definition of âoefucking with natureâ. Are antibiotics considered fucking with nature? Is living in a house and instead of in a cave considered fucking with nature? Is having a light bulb at night considered fucking with nature? Is beer and cooked food considered fucking with nature. Recall no animal cooks its food.

        And that's assuming you can even classify anything that a human does, due to human nature, as not nature driven.

      • Fucking with nature is removing all the proper elements.

        Using antibiotics on it's own is not fucking with nature, but using them to fatten up livestock is fucking with nature. Remember over use of antibiotics like that increases risk of super bugs... and that is without a doubt fucking with nature.

        Living in a cave is fine, so are light bulbs at night. Like everything in this world... if it is used responsibly then it is going to be just fine. It is the constant ignorant and irresponsible use of our resou

        • by Merk42 ( 1906718 )
          So it's only "fucking with nature" if it's something you don't like. Got it.
          • No, its fucking with nature when it begins to displace the natural order of things in catastrophic ways. If it displaces the natural order of things in beneficial ways, then we like to call it helping nature. Additionally, keeping it naturally workable is a key component. If you have to start using a lab then you are beginning to remove the natural processes. So sure antibiotics is fucking with nature, but depending on that usage... it can either be catastrophic if we create super-bugs or beneficial if

            • by dnaumov ( 453672 )

              The natural order of things is itself catastrophic.

            • No, its fucking with nature when it begins to displace the natural order of things in catastrophic ways.

              So ... fire, spears, farming, and animal husbandry all qualify. Cool. I know of a nice cave you can move into as soon as you've abandoned all of those evil technologies.

        • And the coup de grace... you know what kind of natural we are talking about here moron. If you actually can't figure it out... you should keep your pie hole stuffed full of something so you don't pollute peoples ears and eyes with your stupidity!

          I love it when the mask skips and these people react with primitive violence - none of your effete civilized give-and-take debate, nosirree - when one of their cherished assumptions is questioned. Watch for such people masked and carrying baseball bats at a political rally near you.

      • If you want to take that over-used bullshit stance then you have to throw away all your modern conveniences, go naked, and live in the wild forraging for whatever you can find to survive on. Never see a doctor when you're sick, never make or use tools, or anything like that. If it's not 100% 'natural' or 'naturally occurring' then you're not allowed to have it. Of couse you won't be posting on the internet ever again so it's a win-win for everyone.
        If you're not willing to do that then you need to shut up.
    • Modern animal husbandry involves lots of science. In any case, "optimum" depends on what you're optimizing for. If you're optimizing for environmental impact, I guess each family can eat a free range goat a month. If you're optimizing for price, we eat lots of antibiotic laden chickens. If you're optimizing for least vertebrate pain, you eat cells from a dish. If you optimze for sustainability you... modify humanity to have chloroplasts I guess.
      • by sinij ( 911942 )
        We do not currently have technological or ethical know-how to start modifying humanity and nobody doing pilot work in this field as it is illegal in most places that can support scientific research.

        It is unlikely that GMO humans would be modified metabolically to be able to use photosynthesis. It is like putting a solar panel on an electric car - energy needs greatly surpass energy production tot he point that one might not bother with it.
        • Short and succinct... optimization is a key factor here.

          Sun for plants in a good hydrated soil is optimum for the plants but not for humans or livestock. Our optimum is eating and optimized plant. If we eat un-optimized plants we become less optimal and feel more hungry and have to eat more increasing our digestive operations which take away from quality living.

          Every particle that you consume has to be processed by the body. Which is why smaller but nutrient rich portions of food are highly optimal versu

        • I suppose you could settle for fixing our Vitamin C gene so eating fresh food isn't required any more.
          • That's a good start ... I'm really enjoying the mental picture of all the "nature is best" idiots losing their minds because we no longer need fruit in our diet. But why stop there? Might want to look into adding new genes to synthesise other vitamins, like B12.

      • We should optimize for 2 very important things.

        Quality of meat and environment impact. We should make sure that lands are properly managed with scientifically reviewed processes that test the land quality before during and after each grazing process so that patterns can be adjusted to promote floral growth, water retention, and soil quality. This will in turn promote natural carbon sequestration which will help Global Warming, water retention which will reverse Desertification and improve land and weather

      • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

        Animals are optimised for the survival of the species, so are unlikely to be the best option for the environment.

        • stupid comments for 500 alex!

          The balance created by nature with these optimizations is usually the best option for the environment. It is part of the heterogeneous process. A diversity of creatures operating on the land is an overall total improvement while a reduction to homogeneous is an over all disaster for land quality!

          This was settled a long time ago... and has been factually proven by land analysis time and again.

          • by Anonymous Coward

            The balance created by nature with these optimizations is usually the best option for the environment.

            The topic at hand is animal husbandry, so these are not changes that have been driven by nature, but rather by what we humans want out of the animals.

            I am no fan of AmiMoJo, but not everything they post is idiotic drivel. Sometimes you need to click that "Parent" link to discover the context of their post.

          • by cusco ( 717999 )

            The balance created by nature with these optimizations is usually the best option for the environment.

            Not even close to correct. If it were species and ecosystems would stay stable over time, and they don't.

    • "Responsible meat production" means eating very little meat. Barring that, we either culture it, or watch ecological collapse as the amount of meat farming increases manyfold to feed all the developing nations that are beginning to be able to afford more than the traditional occasional treat's worth.

      • This is wrong. You culturing it is what is going to help create the ecological collapse. What do you think is going to happen to all the lands you just took all the livestock off of and instead plant people and homes.

        Those plants have a relationship with grazing animals which is highly beneficial to both them and us humans.

        And in regards to the developing nations. Affording has zero fucking to do with it. Everything is knowledge... they are just like you... ignorant to a fault where you fuck things up "

        • Re:this is dumb! (Score:4, Informative)

          by Immerman ( 2627577 ) on Thursday January 23, 2020 @03:34PM (#59648488)

          You think the limiting factor on human growth is leaving enough room for farming? We're not going to plant people on old farmland - there's nothing there for people to do. People live in cities and towns because they like the proximity and network effects - not because there's not enough empty land for more houses in the middle of nowhere.

          Farming is *devastating* ecologically - we destroy ecologically rich forests and scrubland to produce monoculture wastelands maintained with a steady flow of poisons.

          Grazing lands are a bit better - but we still eliminate most life, including all the predators necessary for maintaining a healthy ecology.

          • Cities grow. That means displaced farmlands "directly" or are you saying that the first square mile of New York is all they ever built and when they wantted to add capacity they just knock down one skyscraper and build a taller skyscraper to have more? They also grow in less than efficient ways because... well money and regulations.

            "Farming is *devastating* ecologically"

            Okay, this needs correction. How we largely do farming today is... thanks to Science, it helping cause this. But science is not specifi

            • It's not a new thing - farming has *always* been ecologically devastating, long before Science was a thing. Pesticides and herbicides made it worse, but it has always been a process of destroying rich ecosystems to make farmland, and then doing our best to kill everything else that tries to eat the food we're growing.

              It didn't used to be a problem simply because there were so few of us that the ecosystem could recover faster than we could do damage. But our population increased 10-fold in the last 200 yea

          • Well gee whiz mister wizard I guess we should just kill ourselves off then.
            • Probably a good idea in the long-term - we are *way* over the ecological carrying capacity of the planet even at current consumption levels, and the majority is rapidly climbing towards Western consumption levels. though I prefer negative population growth myself. Much more humane than massive wars or plagues, and we're most of the way there already. Just a few more impoverished regions to spread education and cheap birth control to. Plus a handful of religiously brainwashed areas, which are potentiall

          • One nice thing about FB -- See? There is one! -- is the "Haha" icon.

            A lot more efficient than something more verbose like the following.

            I don't know where to begin, in responding to this post.

            Who is this "we"?

            Is the world actually less forested now than it was, say, 10 or 50 or 100 years ago?

            Do farmers really poison their croplands?

            On the plus side (no Haha), your first paragraph is exactly right about people living in cities for reasons, and it's not because it's possible to build houses there. Whe

            • >Who is this "we"?
              All of humanity, collectively, if we want to bequeath our descendants a world even half as healthy as we received from our ancestors.

              >Do farmers really poison their croplands?
              Absolutely they do! Perhaps you've heard of something called RoundUp? Highly toxic herbicide that kills most weeds (and other plants) not cultivated to resist it? Or perhaps you've heard of the neonicotinoids that are helping to wipe out the bees? Farmers spray their crops with such insecticides with the ex

    • Science cannot replace the well establish optimum method!

      There are a lot of reasons current meat production is suboptimal, which is why research is progressing on alternative methods. Does this really need to be said? I should think it's fairly obvious.

      You have a fair point about things like IP laws possibly getting in the way, but it's not as though the old methods of producing meat will somehow cease to exist overnight. Some meat production will likely transition over to the new method as it becomes c

      • You missed the key part "Science cannot REPLACE"

        Helping something and replacing are very different things and concepts.

        When you falsify what I said with something I did not say you are not helping the conversation only distracting from it.

        "but it's not as though the old methods of producing meat will somehow cease to exist overnight."

        The fact that it will be displaced is a problem itself. Monsanto is literally the cautionary tale for that. People like you are the ones that wake up in court wondering why i

    • Re:this is dumb! (Score:4, Insightful)

      by ShanghaiBill ( 739463 ) on Thursday January 23, 2020 @03:00PM (#59648344)

      Every time we fuck with nature like this we find out several years or decades later that it was a mistake!

      Can you provide an example?

      GMO crops provide many benefits, and so far, there are no known disadvantages. We also have plenty of engineered meat substitutes made from plants, and none of them are "mistakes".

      There have certainly been environmental mistakes (DDT, fluorocarbons, etc) but those were not "like this" in any way.

      • "Can you provide an example?"

        As someone else mentioned... the numerous court cases Monsanto has been involved with for starters.

        Additionally, the GMO crops are also genetically engineered to be resistant against pesticide like Roundup Ready. Pesticide usage on crops does not just stop at the crops. Those pesticides soon become part of the water table of the lands they are used in and eventually make it far outside their environments. Additionally, there are concerns for GMO's that naturally produce pesti

        • As someone else mentioned... the numerous court cases Monsanto has been involved with for starters.

          As mentioned above, this is bullcrap. When it comes to GMOs, spouting off about Monsanto's "court cases" is like putting a sign on your chest that says "I have no idea what I am talking about."

      • I stopped worrying about GMO crops because that horse left the barn so long ago now that nothing can reverse it but we won't know for years to come yet whether or not our meddling with plant genes has fucked us or not, and if it has there won't be a damn thing we can do about it.
        • we won't know for years to come yet whether or not our meddling with plant genes has fucked us or not

          We have been meddling with plant genes for at least 10,000 years.

    • ...Remember Monsanto! It will be the same mutherfucking thing!...

      Can we imagine how much worse viral and bacterial cultures will explode from this? These are not animals with brains, which may avoid unhealthy or dangerous events, it's just a pool of flesh. These are not animals with antibodies or white cells; as far as I read, this just a pool of flesh.

    • by tlhIngan ( 30335 )

      Science cannot replace the well establish optimum method!

      It's not the optimum method. Raising beef is highly wasteful and inefficient by any measure (water used, land used, raw inputs used, etc). Of course, the vegans and such would LOVE if we all abandoned raising cattle and such for meat production. But that's not realistic at all.

      That's why we have plant-based meat substitutes, and we're trying to do lab-grown meat. The former is more efficient in resources used and simulates meat very well, but requires

    • Pure ignorance being said here.

      First, sience ALWAYS replaces the "well establish optimum method". All the current well established optimum methods were created by science in the past. This alone indicates you know little if anything about how the world works.

      Second, IP laws does not always fuck things up. Usually all they do is raise the price. The only other major problem caused by IP is a barrier to entry for small innovators. Those are real issues, but they are not signicant causes of risk, nor do t

    • by Baleet ( 4705757 )

      We need to increase "responsible meat production" not move it into a fucking lab where Intellectual Property laws are going to totally fuck this up.

      Thank you. I'm not eating that stuff and the reason for producing it has nothing to do with whatever their selling points are. I would upvote, but you're already modded +5.

    • by cusco ( 717999 )

      You've never eaten wild avocados, wild bananas, wild walnuts, wild lettuce, wild apples, etc. etc. etc. Do you know why? The avocado flesh is a thin layer over the seed. The banana is bitter and has seeds. The walnuts are extremely hard to extract from the shell without pulverizing them together. The lettuce is just plain nasty. The apples are tiny and sour.

      Humans have been "fucking with nature" for ten thousand years, it's why we have the delicious food products we have today. It took scientists dec

    • Why yes. Bring back famine, which is what we had before we applied science to agriculture.

  • Hopefully, it'll taste better than the initial batch of meat grown by Veridian Dynamics [veridian-dynamics.org], which tasted like despair [youtube.com]. Poor Blobby...

    Damn, Better Off Ted [wikipedia.org] was funny.

  • Are they still going to come with bones I can simmer to make soup?
    • by clive27 ( 889511 )
      If there are enough demands, they can culture cells to grow like bones, but it will be more expensive than meats since it has to be denser...
  • Finally, I can enjoy Bill Gates's rump without turning on computer.

    • by sinij ( 911942 )
      I see the fun police already arrived with the downvotes. Oh no, he made a cannibalism / Linux Wine joke. The horror! *clutches pearls*
  • Do the cells have to come from animals? I can think of one extremely numerically abundant mammal (7.8 billion) whose cells could be used for food...
    • Do the cells have to come from animals? I can think of one extremely numerically abundant mammal (7.8 billion) whose cells could be used for food...

      Well, Soylent Green did take place in the year 2022, so we're not far off...

    • Do the cells have to come from animals? I can think of one extremely numerically abundant mammal (7.8 billion) whose cells could be used for food...

      An upside to eating your own species is that the nutritional content is close to ideal.

      A downside is that the cultured product would be susceptable to contaminating infection by ANYTHING that infects your species.

  • But I think I'm already eating meat grown from animal cells.

    • by sinij ( 911942 )
      But is your meat "raised from high-profile investors including Bill Gates" ?
      • But is your meat "raised from high-profile investors including Bill Gates" ?

        Dunno. What exactly does 100% Grade-A Greed taste like?

  • It was smoked, and I asked for extra bark. Very tasty. I didn't even add any sauce. It was originally grown on the animal itself, but that doesn't make it not grown from animal cells.
  • I think the correct description would be non-agricultural mass reproduced animal cells. That fight should be interesting.
  • Can we grow long pig? [urbandictionary.com] It's my favorite kind of meat.
  • Finally I'll be able to feast on the most delectable meat of all: MAN

  • Jack Cargill won't eat his own products and Bill Gates is a career criminal. What could possibly go wrong?

  • This sounds like a great idea, but in the long run, they'll probably have to grow bones too so they can be used for flavoring and other purposes. I think growing them in sterile vessels is a good idea too, but they'd be a pain to keep clean and re-sterilize after each batch and the exposed cell surfaces will probably be susceptible to bacteria, even if they start out with a sterile container, so they'll need to either put antibiotics into the growth medium or use conditions that are hostile to ce...err, ne
  • I can see some real potential for lab-grown meats based on endangered or extinct species. Bald eagle nuggets? Dolphin sushi? Mammoth burger? Fire roasted koala? Grilled panda? The possibilities are enormous!
  • I'm eating such meat, that was grown from a single egg-cell for years now.

  • Seriously some people just can't think things through. The environmental impact of agriculture. OK, say you now create meat in labs. What the hell do you think is going to happen to all that farmland? Is it just going to be abandoned and turned into a national park? No, it's going to be turned into residential areas, condos and shopping centers. How's THAT for environmental impact?
    • Really? People are going to turn all of Kansas and Nebraska into condos? That seems extremely unlikely. May I ask, exactly how many billion people do you think live in the US?

  • I'm eating the real thing, thanks, not some engineered stuff that, in my opinion, doesn't need to exist in the first place. In my opinion, most of the reluctance to eat meat has more to do with how removed people are from our biological reality and our history as an agrarian society. Because people don't see their food being raised and slaughtered, they confuse livestock with pets. That is certainly one direction to develop in, but I don't think it makes us better. I'm not sure what the best answer might be
  • by OneHundredAndTen ( 1523865 ) on Thursday January 23, 2020 @06:37PM (#59649342)
    As a dedicated meat-eater, who feels guilty all the time about breeding animals, exploiting them and slaughtering them so we can eat meat, I can't wait for this.
  • I am surprised to find myself creeped out by the idea of eating lab-grown meat. It's odd, because if I put on my "alien from outer-space" hat, eating the flesh of what was once another creature is super-creepy. But there you have it--I can't get over how gross/disgusting/creepy lab-grown meat sounds.

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