| Cultivating success Eat Just and Upside have reached the end of a complicated regulatory process that includes both a nod from the Food and Drug Administration and multiple approvals from the USDA. This is a huge milestone for the industry, and it's been the talk of Future Food Tech this week. "There was a lot of celebration, of course," said Patricia Bubner, cofounder and CEO of the cultivated meat company Orbillion Bio, during a panel discussion. There had been a looming question about whether this sort of product would be legitimized—and now it is, at least in the US, "the most significant market," said Arik Kaufman, cofounder and CEO of Steakholder Foods. Cultivated meat had previously been approved only in Singapore, and it has been served in a restaurant there over the past couple of years. Now it's legal for the two companies to serve their products in the US too, and both plan to do so in restaurants in the coming months. But as Upside's chief operating officer, Amy Chen, put it in a talk at Future Food Tech, "in so many ways, we're just getting started." One major thing I'll be watching is how these companies start producing their products at larger scales. Upside's pilot facility can currently produce around 50,000 pounds (22,600 kg) of finished products each year. At full capacity, it will eventually be able to grow to about 400,000 pounds (180,000 kg) per year. That sounds like a lot, but in the grand scheme of food production, it's pretty tiny. Large commercial meat facilities produce millions of pounds of meat each year—and that's the sort of scale Upside is targeting for its first commercial facility, said Eric Schulze, VP of global scientific and regulatory affairs at Upside foods, in an email. Eat Just's cultured meat subsidiary Good Meat runs two demonstration facilities, one in the US and one in Singapore. Those facilities use large reactors with capacities of 3,500 and 6,000 liters, respectively, said Andrew Noyes, VP of communications at Eat Just. Again, those sound like huge reactors, but the company's plans for its first commercial operation include 10 250,000-liter reactors, and in total, capacity will be about 30 million pounds (13.6 million kg) each year. The road ahead While scaling up processes that have already been demonstrated in labs and pilot facilities will be a major development in the industry moving forward, I'm also fascinated to see what new sorts of products come to market in the next few years. There are over 150 companies in the cultivated meat industry, making everything from beef to tuna to products unlike anything on the market today. A few potential bottlenecks face companies trying to bring new products to market, including developing cell lines, designing and building bioreactors, and making the meat's structure, said Jess Krieger, founder and CEO of the cultivated meat company Ohayo Valley, in a panel discussion. I'm especially interested in that last bit, because meat's structure dictates so much of our experience eating it. Some people, Krieger included, want to use plants to provide it. Others plan to use manufacturing techniques: Upside Foods intends to grow its cells in ways that will help develop the fibrous texture of chicken. Still others, including Steakholder Foods, are looking to 3D-print their meat to replicate the flakiness of fish or the tenderness of a properly cooked steak. Food is so central to our lives, and the tech working to bring new options to our plates is moving quickly. Maybe someday soon, teenagers looking to stop eating animals won't have to give up chicken sandwiches. |
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