Google AI
The Times Australia
The Times World News

.

A mammoth meatball hints at a future of exotic lab-grown meats, but the reality will be far more boring, and rife with problems

  • Written by: Hallam Stevens, Professor of Interdisciplinary Studies, James Cook University
A mammoth meatball hints at a future of exotic lab-grown meats, but the reality will be far more boring, and rife with problems

Last week, an Australian “cultured meat” company called Vow[1] made headlines with a meatball[2] made from the flesh of a woolly mammoth – or something very much like it. Combining the technologies of lab-based cell culture and “de-extinction[3],” Vow scientists grew muscle proteins based on DNA sequences from the long-dead proboscideans.

The meatball was not intended for human consumption, but Vow hoped the gimmick would highlight the lighter environmental footprint[4] of lab-grown meats, using the mammoth as a “a symbol of diversity loss and a symbol of climate change”. The meatball also hinted at a possible new variety and playfulness in meat consumption.

But is lab-grown meat really likely to put mammoths, dodos and other exotica on the menu? Taking into account the safety and economic hurdles the industry will have to clear, the result seems more likely to follow the pattern of genetically modified crops: less diversity, and unforeseen social and environmental effects.

Healthy and safety risks

As Queensland scientist Ernst Wolvetang, who helped to engineer the mammoth-ball, acknowledged[5]:

We haven’t seen this protein for thousands of years, so we have no idea how our immune system would react when we eat it.

Wolvetang thinks any such problems could quickly be solved. But even for lab-grown meat that uses conventional livestock such as beef or chicken, the health and safety risks are far from understood.

Existing concerns include the use of growth hormones[6] in cultured meat, the potential for new or unexpected allergens[7], the way lines of cultured cells change their shape and function over time[8], the likelihood of microbial contamination[9], and uncertainty around the nutrient content[10].

Even changing the texture or composition of meat may have health effects for our digestive system. These problems are likely to be exacerbated for foods based on resurrected proteins from the distant past.

Consider the ‘meat-systems’

But health and safety aren’t the only issues.

Critics of the de-extinction movement have argued that reintroducing animals like the woolly mammoth into the environment may have unpredictable and disruptive effects.

Would predators adapt? Would grasslands be trampled to oblivion? Should we devote our efforts to preserving still-live animals like rhinoceroses instead? Does the possibility of de-extinction make us less worried[11] than we should be about the effect of humans’ actions on biodiversity?

What would the economic system of lab-grown meat production look like? Shutterstock

We should also think in similarly broad terms about the impacts of lab-grown meats. In other words, we shouldn’t just think about meat itself, but about the “meat-systems” that produce it.

What will the economic system of lab-grown meat production look like? How will lab-grown meat disrupt farming and farming communities? How might it affect consumption? Will we eat more meat or less if we can gain access to “ethical” meat?

The lesson of GMOs

The development and rollout of genetically modified organisms (GMOs) over the past three decades can give us some important clues as to how such things may play out. Like lab-grown meats, GMOs at first promised the possibilities of diverse crops that would offer health benefits (like Golden Rice[12]) or benefits to the consumer (like the Flavr Savr tomato[13]).

Few of these possibilities were realised. Instead, most of the benefits of GMOs accrued to agricultural companies who developed and sold the seeds.

Rather than increasing the diversity of foods, GMOs have increased monocultures and reduced the variety of foods[14]. This, in turn, has led to negative environmental and social consequences for agricultural communities.

Read more: The race to protect the food of the future – why seed banks alone are not the answer[15]

Lab-grown meats face a similar risk. Despite the promise of Vow’s mammoth, in the short-term at least, it is likely that lab-grown meats will only become economical for consumers when produced at scale[16].

This suggests the most likely cultured meats on our menus won’t be alligator or dodo, but standardised versions of beef, chicken or pork. Production is also likely to focus on muscle tissue, rather than offal, feet, bone marrow, or the other diverse parts of animals many of us consume.

The most likely outcome of lab-grown meat is not more diversity in protein, but significantly less.

The Italian response

Just as the mammoth meatball was making its debut, the Italian government moved to ban lab-grown meat[17], citing health and the nation’s food heritage. Synthetic foods, government ministers argued, would undermine Italian food traditions, threatening mortadella, pancetta and guanciale.

Coldiretti, an Italian farmers’ association that supported the ban, added the move would protect agriculture from “the attacks of multinational companies[18]”.

Read more: Ultra-processed foods are trashing our health – and the planet[19]

Italy’s proposed ban has been branded “anti-innovation[20]” and a setback for animal rights[21], but they are right to be cautious about the disruption that lab-grown meat could cause.

The history of GMOs has also shown how turning food into a technology has not only made produce less diverse but also consolidated corporate control over the food supply[22]. Even if lab-grown meats are shown to be physiologically safe, we need to establish that they are economically, politically and culturally safe too.

References

  1. ^ Vow (www.forgedbyvow.com)
  2. ^ meatball (www.theguardian.com)
  3. ^ de-extinction (colossal.com)
  4. ^ environmental footprint (www.bbc.com)
  5. ^ acknowledged (www.theguardian.com)
  6. ^ growth hormones (ift.onlinelibrary.wiley.com)
  7. ^ new or unexpected allergens (www.aithm.jcu.edu.au)
  8. ^ change their shape and function over time (doi.org)
  9. ^ likelihood of microbial contamination (ift.onlinelibrary.wiley.com)
  10. ^ uncertainty around the nutrient content (www.frontiersin.org)
  11. ^ less worried (e360.yale.edu)
  12. ^ Golden Rice (foreignpolicy.com)
  13. ^ Flavr Savr tomato (en.wikipedia.org)
  14. ^ reduced the variety of foods (www.reuters.com)
  15. ^ The race to protect the food of the future – why seed banks alone are not the answer (theconversation.com)
  16. ^ produced at scale (thecounter.org)
  17. ^ ban lab-grown meat (www.bbc.com)
  18. ^ the attacks of multinational companies (www.theguardian.com)
  19. ^ Ultra-processed foods are trashing our health – and the planet (theconversation.com)
  20. ^ anti-innovation (www.foodnavigator.com)
  21. ^ setback for animal rights (www.reuters.com)
  22. ^ consolidated corporate control over the food supply (papers.ssrn.com)

Read more https://theconversation.com/a-mammoth-meatball-hints-at-a-future-of-exotic-lab-grown-meats-but-the-reality-will-be-far-more-boring-and-rife-with-problems-203243

Times Magazine

What next from Apple

The question of what comes next for Apple Inc. is no longer theoretical. With leadership transitio...

Leapmotor Hybrid EV Review

The Leapmotor hybrid EV—most notably the Leapmotor C10 REEV (range-extended electric vehicle)—has ...

Navman Gets Even Smarter with 2026 MiVue™ Dash Cams

Introducing NEW Integrated Smart Parking and Australia-First Extended Recording Mode Navman to...

Why Interactive Panels Are Replacing Traditional Whiteboards in Perth

Whiteboards have been part of classrooms and meeting rooms for decades. They’re familiar, flexible...

The Engineering Innovations Transforming the Australian Heavy Transport Fleet

Australia is a massive continent, and its national supply chain relies almost entirely on the road...

Petrol Prices Soar and Rationing Fears Grow — The 10 Cheapest Cars to Run in Australia

Australians are once again confronting a familiar pressure point: the cost of fuel. With petrol pr...

The Times Features

The Quiet Luxury of Ink: Rediscovering the Joy of Writi…

In an age dominated by screens, taps and instant communication, the simple act of writing by hand ...

Owning a Restaurant: Buying One or Braving the Challeng…

Owning a restaurant has long been one of the most alluring—and misunderstood—paths in small busine...

Supermarket Prices Are Up — and So Is Dinner at a Modes…

For many Australians, the weekly grocery shop and a simple night out for dinner have quietly becom...

In 2006, The Devil Wears Prada Became One of the First …

When The Devil Wears Prada premiered in 2006, it was marketed as a sharp, entertaining adaptation ...

Protecting High-Value Homes Before Sale: A Practical Gu…

Selling a premium home is rarely just about listing and waiting. At the top end of the market, buy...

Eumundi Markets: One of the Sunshine Coast’s most power…

As Queensland prepares for Small Business Month in May, Experience Eumundi is highlighting the cri...

Club Med Expands Exclusive Collection Portfolio with a …

Club Med, the global leader in premium all-inclusive holidays for 75 years, and Central Group Capita...

Cost of living increases worry Farrer residents

COST OF LIVING ‘CRUNCH’ HITS FARRER HARD, THE NATIONALS HEAR During a visit to Albury this week...

What's On: Two Psychics and a Medium – Australian …

HIT LIVE SHOW TWO PSYCHICS AND A MEDIUM EMBARK ON  AUSTRALIAN TOUR — AND NO TWO NIGHTS WILL BE T...