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Science

The Biggest Problem With Lab-Grown Chicken Is Growing the Chicken (bloomberg.com) 74

Ten years ago, a Dutch scientist unveiled a $330,000 lab-grown hamburger made from cow cells grown in petri dishes. It took six weeks to culture the patty. A chef cooked it onstage as journalists watched. Reactions ranged from "unpleasant" to "beeflike." The scientist expected supermarket sales in a decade. His company and others have since raised over $2 billion but have little to show, only recently making one pound of chicken monthly. Despite bold promises of mass production, low emissions, and better nutrition, commercial viability remains elusive. Bloomberg Business: The company [Upside Foods], in a letter from its attorney to Bloomberg Businessweek, says plans for scaling up have been an evolution saddled with "realities and complexities of doing something that has never been done before. Innovation rarely happens in a straight and continuous line."

The dream is moist, meaty flesh self-multiplying ad infinitum in high-tech, stainless steel cell-growing chambers. But according to internal company documentation and eight former employees, most of whom requested anonymity because they don't have permission to discuss confidential information, Upside at the moment is actually growing just minuscule numbers of chicken skin-type cells in small plastic bottles, then scraping them out gram by gram to compress and mold them into a single forkful of flesh. This labor-intensive chicken has higher levels of cholesterol and lead than the real thing, publicly available company documentation shows. Even if that sounds remotely desirable, some scientists say the whole energy-intensive endeavor may actually be worse for the environment, especially with chicken, which has the smallest carbon footprint of anything at the local butcher. All of which points to this question: Why exactly are we chasing lab-grown chicken?[...]

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The Biggest Problem With Lab-Grown Chicken Is Growing the Chicken

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  • It's a perfect example how deluded some pro-green circles are when it comes to artificial replacements of what nature can produce on a whim.

    • It's a tech that will allow for better, cheaper meat. And it's not a question of if the tech will be possible, but when. This company is just going for early mover status, and so of course it's not going to revolutionize the meat industry right away.

      • >better
        how on earth do you figure that?
        wouldn't growing this garbage in a lab yield a product on par with veal ? (which is a totally separate issue/product.) i don't want my chicken thighs to have the texture of veal. do they have a mechanism for stimulating the muscle tissue while it's growing in the vat?
        >cheaper
        chicken is already quite efficient in terms of space and cost (even discounting battery farms)

        • chicken is already quite efficient in terms of space and cost (even discounting battery farms)

          There's literally a chicken farm about ten miles to the east of me, up on the Cumberland plateau. It's going to be a massive chicken farm once the expansion is complete. The loan to secure that expansion is backed by the Federal Government. No chicken farmer will argue you this, the reason chicken is cheap in the US is because of the US Federal Government.

          And that also gets into the hedge industry is looking towards with lab chicken. Federal Government has gotten recently a bit wishy washy on subsidies.

          • Chicken isn't that cheap, sadly. I miss $0.10 wings.

            • Chicken isn't that cheap, sadly. I miss $0.10 wings.

              Well, wings got $$ because they got so popular...it isn't from shortage that's for sure.

              But aside from wings....down here, chicken can readily be found whole from between $0.89-$0.99/lb.

              Where do you live and how much is it up there?

              • Chicken isn't that cheap, sadly. I miss $0.10 wings.

                Well, wings got $$ because they got so popular...it isn't from shortage that's for sure.

                But aside from wings....down here, chicken can readily be found whole from between $0.89-$0.99/lb.

                Where do you live and how much is it up there?

                Se united States. Depends on the cut but even thighs and legs are going to be more than that at a supermarket.

                I can tell you that frozen tenderloins at the local Walmart are around $3.50/lb or more in bulk. If you buy fresh you're paying more.

                • To add to the data, I checked the local Aldi for their prices which are typically quite low. Just looking at the boneless cuts of chickrn:

                  Bulk breasts: $2.29/lb
                  Thigha: $2.99/lb
                  Breasts: $3.49/lb
                  Tenderloins: $3.99/lb

                  • Well, there's one problem...."boneless".

                    You get significantly better prices for less processed meats....buy a whole chicken, it takes all of 5 minutes to cut it up yourself.

    • those guys are mostly pushing vegetarianism, veganism or at least no meat Mondays. This is mega corps that are looking at the prospect of factory farms that cost a fraction to run.

      Honestly modern factory farms produce such low quality meat I doubt it could be any worse than lab grown. I'm vegetarian because I've never liked meat, but even when I did eat the stuff I'd shy away from some of the stuff I've seen online of late.
  • Why? Really? (Score:4, Insightful)

    by doug141 ( 863552 ) on Friday December 15, 2023 @01:14PM (#64083975)

    To avoid the animal suffering in corporate industrial farming. How did editor get the idea carbon was the goal? I guess if they pull that off, low-carbon chicken opens a new market among people who care more about carbon footprint than animal suffering. Did anyone read why there's lead in the lab-chicken-meat?

    • by skam240 ( 789197 )

      Simply put, far more people care about global warming than they do about the ethics of slaughtering an animal for consumption or even (going by sales) the results of industrial farming.

      It's just smart marketing on their part.

      • by tlhIngan ( 30335 )

        Problem is, chicken is a poor protein because among the meat proteins it's already the lowest consumption. It's extremely feed efficient with 1.8:1 (1.8lbs of feed for 1lb of meat), and requires the least amount of land and water to grow.

        You want to reduce carbon, substitutes for beef are required - this is because its requirements are high - it's has poor conversion (9 lbs of feed for 1 lb of meat), takes up huge tracts of lands and water. Reducing beef consumption would greatly reduce emissions.

        • Problem is, chicken is a poor protein because among the meat proteins it's already the lowest consumption. It's extremely feed efficient with 1.8:1 (1.8lbs of feed for 1lb of meat), and requires the least amount of land and water to grow.

          You want to reduce carbon, substitutes for beef are required - this is because its requirements are high - it's has poor conversion (9 lbs of feed for 1 lb of meat), takes up huge tracts of lands and water. Reducing beef consumption would greatly reduce emissions.

          Problem is, chicken is a poor protein because among the meat proteins it's already the lowest consumption.

          This depends greatly on the country. The following numbers are from 2020.

          - US per capita meat consumption is 149 kg per year, of which 58 kg is poultry (mostly chicken), 37 kg is beef, 40 kg is pork, and 22 kg is fish and seafood.
          - Portugal has similar total consumption, but consumes 40 kg, 19 kg, 38 kg, and 59 kg, respectively.
          - Spain is 33/12/52/40.
          - Argentina is 46/47/14/7.
          - Brazil is 48/35/14/8.
          - China is 15/7/36/40.
          - Japan is 22/10/22/47.
          - Germany is 18/15/44/13
          - World average is 16/9/14/20.

          The world a

        • by skam240 ( 789197 )

          Problem is this is new tech and so they are going after the easiest results so they can make a viable product for the market to fund future endeavors.

          Give me a frick'n break with your lesson on feed to food efficiencies. All youve done is basically repeated what the above said so if my head was completely up my ass I would have already gotten my lesson.

    • Did anyone read why there's lead in the lab-chicken-meat?

      Probably just contamination from the lead researcher. Sometimes those cells get cloned in there too by mistake.

    • by crt ( 44106 )

      Anyone pushing that angle hasn't really looked at the market size of the intersection of "vegans intent on eliminating animal suffering" and "people who INSIST on eating meat and can't be happy with a plant based diet".
      It's not very big.
      I suspect the reality is that these efforts are driven by two things:
      1. "Because we can" from scientists who genuinely want to see their research turn into something on a shelf.
      2. A belief that over time, scaling and technology improvement will make it better and cheaper tha

      • "Because we can" from scientists who genuinely want to see their research turn into something on a shelf.

        I believe that there is quite a separation between "because we can" and seeing one's efforts turn into products on a shelf. The "because we can" crowd are the types that build a ship in a bottle, an artificial challenge imposed on themselves to prove some some combination of skill and patience. These efforts can turn into products on a shelf on a small scale, and remain as a small scale product precisely because of the skill and patience involved.

        The people that want to see their efforts turn into some ma

    • by Bahbus ( 1180627 )

      Carbon emissions are a far more serious and important issue than the quality of life my food receives no matter how much I agree that they shouldn't be suffering.

    • by PPH ( 736903 )

      To avoid the animal suffering in corporate industrial farming.

      "Nature is red in tooth and claw."

    • Many vegetarians oppose the eating of meat on the grounds that raising animals for slaughter has a large carbon footprint. It's not JUST because they care about the welfare of animals.

    • "To avoid the animal suffering in corporate industrial farming."

      Free range organic chicken is already available.

  • by Impy the Impiuos Imp ( 442658 ) on Friday December 15, 2023 @01:45PM (#64084107) Journal

    Why? It's a science fiction thing for people living on Mars. See also robot flying cars and autodocs.

    On and ultra-vegans, who find secular but massive sin in real meat. I recall some objections to lab grown meat -- it cake from a real animal at some point, even if humanely harvested. And the farthest out there objected because of something like evolutionary behavioral memory of meat eating viciousness being exercised. That's my formulation of a confused description, and it took decades to develop.

  • by FudRucker ( 866063 ) on Friday December 15, 2023 @01:47PM (#64084117)
    the chicken comes from a chicken egg, that might be a good place to start
    • the chicken comes from a chicken egg, that might be a good place to start

      Nope, I'm pretty sure that first the chicken egg comes from the chicken.

  • Reactions ranged from "unpleasant" to "beeflike."

    From Better Off Ted [wikipedia.org], (S1E2) Heroes [fandom.com]: Tastes like despair [youtube.com]:

    Jerome: [tasting lab-grown meat] It tastes familiar.
    Ted: Beef?
    Jerome: No.
    Linda: Chicken? We'll take chicken.
    Ted: What does it taste like?
    Jerome: Despair.
    Ted: Is it possible it just needs salt?

  • To get to the other side.

  • Animal 57 [kibo.com]
  • Hayflick limit [wikipedia.org]: Normal cells will only divide a limited number of times before they die (about 40-60 times for human cells). This would seem to restrict the production of lab-grown cultures of any kind, including meat. Although: cancerous cells don't have this limitation. But who wants to eat tumors? It's an open question [afr.com]. (Oh, NOW there's a pay-wall. Sometimes.)

    So there's this [nih.gov]; this [gfi.org] (which also mentions genetic drift); and this [sciencedirect.com] (where the authors skip directly from "muscle stem cells biopsied from one li

  • I watched a YouTube video recently from Scott Manley on space food, and how it has developed over time. I can't find it again right now but there's plenty out there about the problems of feeding humans in space. A science fiction vision on this comes from The Martian by Andy Weir, where people could live reasonably healthy lives on vegetable matter alone. It would be a monotonous and miserable existence but survivable.

    To make life on Mars, or any place beyond Earth orbit, something people would more than

  • To make a small portion of the population feel better.

  • The irrelevant problems were addressed and reported on, but relevant problems weren't.

    Also, if I wanted to eat something, and hamburger was my first choice but wasn't available, my second choice wouldn't be "scientists say this, arguably, is a hamburger." Even if I'm dying for a hamburger but circumstances leave me to choose from ordering from a menu at a vegan restaurant of dishes I'd never tasted and the Mad Science Grey Area Meat I'd go with the former. I'd at least have a clue what the ingredients rese

  • Meet-eating yeomanry head-chop a chicken to minimize ... decency. I did that as a child during the Korean War when meat was in short supply ... still after WW2 really. But, Bosco does not know that. Now the green-beanerz want us to feel guilt about head-chopping chickens and ducks and grouse and turkey and geese and ... well you know the score. Better use a 16-guage on the grouse and turkey OKey ? Better
    to head-chop a few hundred kale-ghnosherz and dispense with wasted breath.
  • Do we have all the flavors of Soilent yet?

    Well, except for Soilent Green. Not sure if that will get regulatory permission in the western world this decade. And of course, that's not lab grown.


    But, based on the pseudo ScFi T.V. series, Eureka, we have to be extra careful of no side effects for lab grow meat. I mean, who wants to become dumb from food?
    (Eureka, season 2, episode 8)


    I say skip the existing animals, chickens, cows, sheep for cloning meat, let's go whole hog, (with no pig involved), and c

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