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Researchers claim to use Bio engineered meat anytime soon

A burger was grown in a laboratory. Sounds like a science-fiction? It was until the prospect of lab-grown meat starts appearing on our supermarket shelves. Synthetic or test-tube meat involves taking a small number of cells from a living animal and is grown into lumps of muscle tissue in the lab, which can then, in theory, be eaten as meat for human consumption.
As well as avoiding killing animals, scientists believe it could help reduce the environmental impact of meat production.
The technology to create artificial meat has been around since the turn of the century. NASA once looked into developing it for their astronauts, but making an edible and commercially viable product has remained out of reach. It also remains to be seen whether consumers will accept it as an alternative to farm animal-based meat.

But now a U.S. scientist says he is closer than ever to achieving the technological breakthrough. What’s more, he believes a market for his lab-grown meat does exist.

Hungarian-born Gabor Forgacs, of the University of Missouri, is a specialist in tissue engineering, working to create replacement tissue and organs for humans. He realized the same technology could be used to engineer meat for human consumption.

His company, Modern Meadows, has already attracted a number of investors since being launched in 2011, including, says Forgacs, funding from the U.S. Department of Agriculture.

Initially, at least, his engineered meat is likely to be more of a “niche” product, priced somewhere close to Kobe beef, which is currently around $125-$395 a kilo.

“This product isn’t going to be for the masses at the beginning, it’s going to be for eco-conscious people and people who don’t eat meat for ethical reasons,” says Forgacs.

However, Forgacs is not the only scientist working on lab-grown meat. Dutch researchers, led by Professor Mark Post of Maastricht University, are promising a high-profile launch for their synthetic hamburger by the end of the year.

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“It’s not going to be as easy as some people imagine,” says Forgacs, and adds, “I am not racing him (Mark Post).”

Rather than attempt to race to produce an engineered meat product, Forgacs said his first lab-grown product is going to be leather, which he says “is a similar product to some extent but not as controversial and doesn’t require the same legislation that meat does”.

When it comes to producing meat, Forgacs says the most difficult part is creating muscle tissue that tastes, looks, and feels like animal flesh.

“What the final outcome is going to be is difficult to predict,” says Forgacs. “One thought is that it’ll be something like an ingredient to a lot of staples which are based on animal protein — for example, we make something which has the consistency of ground meat, and that can be used for paté, meatballs.
“Take the analogy of flour. You don’t eat flour, it’s not very tasty, but you eat a zillion products that contain flour and are very yummy. Whether or not this is going to be a major application of our product, I don’t know, but this is something I envisage it leading to.”

Forgacs says lab-grown meat is becoming increasingly necessary as the world struggles to cope with an unsustainable meat industry.

As well as animal welfare concerns over rearing large numbers of farm animals in close proximity, the water use, farmland for animal feed, waste, and greenhouse gas emissions associated with meat production make it one of the most significant environmental problems in the world today.

The U.N. Food and Agricultural Organization estimated that 18% of global greenhouse emissions are accounted for by the livestock sector, and demand for meat is predicted to double over the next 40 years.
Research from the University of Oxford, published last year, estimated that lab-grown meat produces 78-96% lower greenhouse gas emissions than conventionally produced meat within the EU. It also had a 99% lower land use and 82-96% lower water use.

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“The rules of the game of meat production are not the same as they were 100 years ago,” says Forgacs. “It’s not sustainable. We are destroying this planet with intensive meat production. Seventy percent of arable land today is one way or another connected to animals through grazing animals or growing food for them. We’re running out of it.”

He adds: “What we’re doing is a transformational idea. We’re going to produce something that is not the same, but it is going to be cost-efficient and much less harmful to the environment.”
What still remains uncertain is whether or not consumers will accept a lab-grown meat product.

Neil Stephens, a sociologist from the Cesagen Centre at UK’s Cardiff University, has been studying the emergence of lab-grown meat and has interviewed a number of researchers working on the technology.
“Is this stuff really meat or something else?” says Stephens. “Some wanted it to be meat and recognized like any other meat. Then there is a minority who feel it is a meat substitute, very meat-like but not meat.”
Without a product available for people to see, smell, and taste, Stephens says it is difficult for any debate about how to classify it to move forward.

“If it ever becomes a marketable product, it will still be a small one. It is not going to be plumped in the supermarket. It will take time to gain acceptability,” says Stephens.

Many of the scientists working on lab-grown meat still see their research as marginal and are striving to get synthetic meat accepted as a reality, according to Stephens.

Whatever the final outcome, lab-grown meat is no longer in the realm of science fiction. “It is coming. There is no question that someone will hit it big, and if we are the ones, then so much the better,” says Forgacs.


The original source was published in CNN

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