Climate

Is cell-cultured meat ready for prime time?

Comment

cell cultivated meat
Image Credits: Bryce Durbin/TechCrunch

Meat has been part of the human diet since before we found fire, but it’s becoming increasingly apparent that the production of meat at scale is more of a detriment to the environment and the world than a benefit.

Across cultures and geographies, animals have been such a vital part of the food chain that it’s hard to imagine a world where animals are not put to the knife to produce protein.

There’s no stopping innovation, however, and alternative sources of protein are increasingly becoming a choice people would rather make.

Cell-cultured meat is one such source. Also known as cultivated or lab-grown meat, this process uses cells from animals to make meat without slaughter. While the nascent sector is a hot topic for the benefits it promises, the process remains slow and costly.

Investments in this sector are heating up, though. If 2021 was anything to go by, there is an abundance of both companies and investors hungry for ways to scale and speed up the process — and do it profitably.

However, it’s not yet clear when meat grown in labs will reach the kind of scale required to see it at your local grocery store.

High steaks

Cell-cultured meat owes its growing popularity, at least in part, to some of the macro challenges the world faces with food production. Overcultivation, human-made climate change and diminishing sources of water are all contributing to a future where food insecurity will be a gigantic problem.

The outlook is bleak: The United Nations estimates food production will need to double to feed the nearly 10 billion people expected to populate the planet by 2050. As for protein, people around the world consumed about 324 million metric tons of meat in 2020, and that number is set to rise even further.

Changing how we cultivate and produce food is key to solving this problem, and we already have systems like vertical farming to address the problem of overcultivation, as well as protein sources other than meat. Currently, alternative protein makes up just about 2% of the animal protein market, but it is expected to increase more than 7x by 2025.

“We are trying to meet the Paris Agreement, but we can’t meet that without addressing the food system and the way we produce meat, eggs and dairy,” said Sharyn Murray, senior investor engagement specialist at Good Food Institute, a nonprofit advocating for reimagined meat production. “The conversion ratio for calories in versus calories out is seven to eight calories for a chicken for one calorie out, while plant-based is one calorie in and one out.”

Cultivated meat is just one of the approaches to meeting future demand for protein alongside plant-based and fermentation techniques. Murray and others I spoke to referred to the movement as “a massive transformation of the food system that will take time.” Meaning the shift will not happen overnight, Murray said.

There is also only one company with cell-cultured meat products available in the market currently: Eat Just, whose subsidiary GOOD Meat has received regulatory approval to produce and sell its cell-cultured meat in Singapore. Eat Just also recently received approval to sell chicken breasts made with cell cultures.

A nugget made from lab-grown chicken meat is seen during a media presentation in Singapore, the first country to allow the sale of meat created without slaughtering any animals, on December 22, 2020. (Photo by Nicholas YEO / AFP) (Photo by NICHOLAS YEO/AFP via Getty Images)
A nugget made from lab-grown chicken meat is seen during a December media presentation in Singapore, the first country to allow the sale of meat created without slaughtering any animals. Image Credits: Nicholas YEO / AFP / Getty Images

Josh Tetrick, co-founder and CEO of Eat Just, said the movement is here even if people are not buying a lot of lab-grown meat yet.

“It is still small-scale, and the most important thing we are doing that other companies should do is focus on the design, engineering and full-scale installations of vessels and the supporting systems to make a lot of it.”

To reach full scale, about 15 million pounds of meat will need to be produced each year, Tetrick said. At that level, companies will be able to supply a good chunk of the U.S. market and to prominent retailers, restaurants and food distributors.

In addition, meat produced this way is still quite costly — think $50 for a steak right now — and significant consumer education will be necessary to help people understand how companies are making their meat products so that it mimics the taste, texture and aroma of the real thing.

“Getting the cost down will be a critical first step for scaling and profitability,” Murray said.

A world of opportunity, but it’s going to take time

Building the infrastructure and support system to reach scale will take billions of dollars over the course of a decade, Tetrick said. There are not many plug-and-play components; most have to be built from scratch.

Eat Just is investing hundreds of millions of dollars in design, engineering and implementation to be able to produce at a large scale, and he noted that it won’t be producing any significant volume for at least two years.

McKinsey forecasts that the cultivated meat market will be valued at $25 billion by 2030, while Barclays took an even more optimistic outlook by estimating it will be a $450 billion market by 2040. Barclays also predicts that price parity will be reached with traditional meat in five to 10 years.

The Good Food Institute took a look at the cultivated meat market in February 2021 and found that VC investment in the sector rose to $450 million in 2020 from just $60 million in 2019, Murray said.

We’ve also been quite busy reporting on some of those: Animal Alternative, New Age Meats, Orbillion Bio, Eat Just and Tiamat Sciences, to name a few. Aleph Farms and Mosa Meat said last year that actor Leonardo DiCaprio invested an undisclosed amount in both.

This year is poised to match that or even do better — for example, Future Meat Technologies said in December it raised $347 million to make lab-grown meat in the United States.

The fundraise topped a busy year for Future Meat Technologies, which opened its cultivated meat production line in Israel in April. It is now looking at several locations in the U.S. for a large-scale production facility, Yaakov Nahmias, founder and president, told TechCrunch. Pending regulatory approval and facility acquisition, he expects U.S. consumers to be able to try its products in the next year.

The three-year-old company is also proving that it can scale its product and bring the cost of cell-cultured meat down considerably. Future Meat develops its own growth factor and has been able to get the cost down for the cell cultures to $2 per liter versus the industry average of $160 to $170 per liter, Nahmias said.

It uses connected tissue cells called fibroblasts that bring the cost down from $96 per kilogram of chicken in April to $17 per kilogram.

“Other cells, like stem cells, are unstable and don’t grow very well, so most of the volume of your vessel becomes mass and that’s the part that is costly,” he explained. “Fibroblasts are stable and need just a few growth factors and hormones to keep them happy. The price for fibroblasts starts at $50 and drops from there, so our starting point is already five times cheaper than anyone else.”

Who else is cooking?

There has been a flurry of activity in the space in the last few months.

A few companies have cracked the code on a cheaper growth factor, also known as cell feed or media. One of these, Estonia-based Gelatex, grabbed €1.2 million in seed funding to develop a nanofibrous 3D scaffolding material for growing cell-cultured meat.

A bigger player in the space, UPSIDE Foods (which changed its name from Memphis Meats in May), is developing an animal-component-free growth factor that is a major milestone for producing lab meat at scale, founder and CEO Uma Valeti told TechCrunch.

The company in November also opened a 53,000-square-foot engineering, production and innovation center in Emeryville, California. It is designed to produce any species of meat, poultry and seafood, and will initially make more than 50,000 pounds of finished product as it scales to a future capacity of over 400,000 pounds per year, Valeti said.

“We’ve spent the last five years building up our technology and showing the path to price reduction,” he added. “Our facility shows a blueprint for future manufacturing facilities, and our growth media offers hope for the industry that the innovations truly shaping society and making the biggest impact have always been compliant as we move from premium to conventional pricing.”

Israeli cultured meat company MeaTech, which develops biomass cells that are fed into 3D printers to create meat products, announced a partnership with Sound Ventures in October to accelerate its production. The company has 3D-printed a 4-ounce steak made entirely from cultivated cells, a hybrid of plant-based proteins and cell-cultured fat, its co-founder, Omri Schanin, told me, adding that the fat is what enhances the aroma, texture, flavor and mouthfeel.

Scientist holding Petri dish with cultured meat
Scientist holding a petri dish with cultured meat. Image Credits: Liudmila Chernetska

Currently, MeaTech can produce almost 1 kilogram of cultivated chicken fat biomass in a single production run. For the steak, it takes 10 days from when cells are defrosted. While 3D printing might not seem like a fast way to make food, Schanin said the company is producing a multi-nozzle system that will eventually print a very large quantity of steaks in less than a minute.

MeaTech plans to open a pilot plant in Belgium in 2022 and begin production of its cell-cultured fat at scale. It intends to sell that to plant-based producers who are looking to enhance the flavor and meatiness of their products, like chicken nuggets and vegetarian sausages.

“All of this recent news validates the technology that many companies are working on,” Schanin said. “There are differences between the companies, but the general idea repeats itself in that we are all trying to prove we can enable mass production of our products in the future.”

Who’s backing cell-cultured meat, and one who isn’t

Due to the amount of investment activity in this space, it is safe to say that some traditional venture capital firms and protein producers have found something they like about cell-cultured meat.

On the producer side, both Cargill and Tyson Ventures invested in UPSIDE Foods four years ago and were joined by SoftBank, Norwest, Temasek, Threshold Ventures and Finistere, to name a few. Tyson was also an investor in Future Meat Technologies, as is ADM Ventures.

New Age Meats’ investment came from South Korea-based Hanwha Solutions and existing investors SOSV’s IndieBio, TechU Ventures, ff VC and Siddhi Capital.

In addition to VCs, Eat Just is backed by several governments, including the Qatar Investment Authority and Singapore Food Agency.

However, Joško Bobanović, partner at Sofinnova Partners, told TechCrunch his venture group, one of the oldest in Europe, has not yet invested in the sector. His firm has seen technologies it is interested in, but has not yet found “the princess among the frogs,” he said.

Some of the measures Bobanović considers for cell-cultured meat is where a company is on the cost curve and what key milestones it has overcome to bring products to a cost that will be acceptable to the system. He is also not confident about consumers’ reactions and whether they will buy the products, saying the cost drop itself will not be enough — it will take lots of people trying the products.

“This is where we come into discrepancies in thinking,” he said. “We have been around startups that went to cost curve, but their dependency is on the growth factor, or the growth media, but there is less price sensitivity here, and is one of the parts of the ecosystem that needs to mature to bring the cost to an affordable level.”

Other prominent investors in the space include At One Ventures, True Ventures and Blue Horizon.

Friederike Grosse-Holz, a director at Blue Horizon with a background in bioinformatics and protein biochemistry, told TechCrunch the technology is indeed still in its early days, especially for companies trying to create whole cuts of meat.

She said cultured meat is “a little like a moonshot” now, but felt that will change once price parity comes in the next decade or so and hybrid products come to market, which are the early forms of meat made with proteins plus the cultured cells.

Grosse-Holz was one of the authors of a BCG/Blue Horizon report on the sector and said their research forecasts that 11% of all the meat, seafood, eggs and dairy eaten globally by 2035 will be from an alternative source. That is the same time frame given for when those products will reach full parity in taste, texture and price with conventional animal proteins.

“We are far from clear in knowing which technology will be the best,” she said. “The difference will be in how it works, what media you feed the cells, how you grow them — if they will bond to something or be in suspension — and that will then determine what equipment is needed. So it is good there are so many players and a space for them.”

The future of meat?

Eat Just’s Tetrick believes regulation is one of the biggest hurdles to scaling production.

“This is not approved in 198 countries, but only in one country, so we are not even close to effecting the change we want,” he added.

Many of these companies are actively working with the U.S. Department of Agriculture and U.S. Food and Drug Administration to get regulatory approval to offer their cell-cultured meat on this side of the world.

In September, the USDA sought public comment on the labeling of meat and poultry products made in this manner, which many of the founders see as a positive step.

It’s is “a promising sign,” GFI’s Murray said, and when the U.S. has regulations in place, other countries will follow.

Once UPSIDE Foods gets the regulatory green light, Valeti said it will begin producing at limited capacity and initially launch through restaurants as it ramps up its larger commercial facility. He expects the facility to take a few years to be constructed and begin operations, but he is optimistic that it could take just two to five years before UPSIDE’s products will make it to grocery store shelves.

Meanwhile, the 2030 time frame predicted for cell-cultured meat to reach the mainstream isn’t out of reach, Blue Horizon’s Grosse-Holz said. She feels there are a couple of technology “step changes” that still need to happen, especially at companies aiming for whole cuts of meat.

Overall, the next steps will be about cost, consumer acceptance and adoption, she said.

“This is not a revolution, it is a transformation, and it is going to take time,” Grosse-Holz added. “Food is tied to emotion, and if it feels like you have to change your food, it will be hard. But if you can change your mind around the way we make food, what a climate-friendly diet will look like and the ethics around animal farming, this may be a way where you don’t have to give up the indulgence around the barbecue, but can do something better for the planet, animals and humankind.”

More TechCrunch

All cars suffer when the mercury drops, but electric vehicles suffer more than most as heaters draw more power and batteries charge more slowly as the liquid electrolyte inside thickens.…

Porsche invests in battery startup South 8 to boost cold-weather EV performance

Scale AI has raised a $1 billion Series F round from a slew of big-name institutional and corporate investors including Amazon and Meta.

Data-labeling startup Scale AI raises $1B as valuation doubles to $13.8B

The new coalition, Tech Against Scams, will work together to find ways to fight back against the tools used by scammers and to better educate the public against financial scams.

Meta, Match, Coinbase and others team up to fight online fraud and crypto scams

It’s a wrap: European Union lawmakers have given the final approval to set up the bloc’s flagship, risk-based regulations for artificial intelligence.

EU Council gives final nod to set up risk-based regulations for AI

London-based fintech Vitesse has closed a $93 million Series C round of funding led by investment giant KKR.

Vitesse, a payments and treasury management platform for insurers, raises $93M to fuel US expansion

Zen Educate, an online marketplace that connects schools with teachers, has raised $37 million in a Series B round of funding. The raise comes amid a growing teacher shortage crisis…

Zen Educate raises $37M and acquires Aquinas Education as it tries to address the teacher shortage

“When I heard the released demo, I was shocked, angered and in disbelief that Mr. Altman would pursue a voice that sounded so eerily similar to mine.”

Scarlett Johansson says that OpenAI approached her to use her voice

A new self-driving truck — manufactured by Volvo and loaded with autonomous vehicle tech developed by Aurora Innovation — could be on public highways as early as this summer.  The…

Aurora and Volvo unveil self-driving truck designed for a driverless future

The European venture capital firm raised its fourth fund as fund as climate tech “comes of age.”

ETF Partners raises €285M for climate startups that will be effective quickly — not 20 years down the road

Copilot, Microsoft’s brand of generative AI, will soon be far more deeply integrated into the Windows 11 experience.

Microsoft wants to make Windows an AI operating system, launches Copilot+ PCs

Hello and welcome back to TechCrunch Space. For those who haven’t heard, the first crewed launch of Boeing’s Starliner capsule has been pushed back yet again to no earlier than…

TechCrunch Space: Star(side)liner

When I attended Automate in Chicago a few weeks back, multiple people thanked me for TechCrunch’s semi-regular robotics job report. It’s always edifying to get that feedback in person. While…

These 81 robotics companies are hiring

The top vehicle safety regulator in the U.S. has launched a formal probe into an April crash involving the all-electric VinFast VF8 SUV that claimed the lives of a family…

VinFast crash that killed family of four now under federal investigation

When putting a video portal in a public park in the middle of New York City, some inappropriate behavior will likely occur. The Portal, the vision of Lithuanian artist and…

NYC-Dublin real-time video portal reopens with some fixes to prevent inappropriate behavior

Longtime New York-based seed investor, Contour Venture Partners, is making progress on its latest flagship fund after lowering its target. The firm closed on $42 million, raised from 64 backers,…

Contour Venture Partners, an early investor in Datadog and Movable Ink, lowers the target for its fifth fund

Meta’s Oversight Board has now extended its scope to include the company’s newest platform, Instagram Threads, and has begun hearing cases from Threads.

Meta’s Oversight Board takes its first Threads case

The company says it’s refocusing and prioritizing fewer initiatives that will have the biggest impact on customers and add value to the business.

SeekOut, a recruiting startup last valued at $1.2 billion, lays off 30% of its workforce

The U.K.’s self-proclaimed “world-leading” regulations for self-driving cars are now official, after the Automated Vehicles (AV) Act received royal assent — the final rubber stamp any legislation must go through…

UK’s autonomous vehicle legislation becomes law, paving the way for first driverless cars by 2026

ChatGPT, OpenAI’s text-generating AI chatbot, has taken the world by storm. What started as a tool to hyper-charge productivity through writing essays and code with short text prompts has evolved…

ChatGPT: Everything you need to know about the AI-powered chatbot

SoLo Funds CEO Travis Holoway: “Regulators seem driven by press releases when they should be motivated by true consumer protection and empowering equitable solutions.”

Fintech lender SoLo Funds is being sued again by the government over its lending practices

Hard tech startups generate a lot of buzz, but there’s a growing cohort of companies building digital tools squarely focused on making hard tech development faster, more efficient and —…

Rollup wants to be the hardware engineer’s workhorse

TechCrunch Disrupt 2024 is not just about groundbreaking innovations, insightful panels, and visionary speakers — it’s also about listening to YOU, the audience, and what you feel is top of…

Disrupt Audience Choice vote closes Friday

Google says the new SDK would help Google expand on its core mission of connecting the right audience to the right content at the right time.

Google is launching a new Android feature to drive users back into their installed apps

Jolla has taken the official wraps off the first version of its personal server-based AI assistant in the making. The reborn startup is building a privacy-focused AI device — aka…

Jolla debuts privacy-focused AI hardware

The ChatGPT mobile app’s net revenue first jumped 22% on the day of the GPT-4o launch and continued to grow in the following days.

ChatGPT’s mobile app revenue saw its biggest spike yet following GPT-4o launch

Dating app maker Bumble has acquired Geneva, an online platform built around forming real-world groups and clubs. The company said that the deal is designed to help it expand its…

Bumble buys community building app Geneva to expand further into friendships

CyberArk — one of the army of larger security companies founded out of Israel — is acquiring Venafi, a specialist in machine identity, for $1.54 billion. 

CyberArk snaps up Venafi for $1.54B to ramp up in machine-to-machine security

Founder-market fit is one of the most crucial factors in a startup’s success, and operators (someone involved in the day-to-day operations of a startup) turned founders have an almost unfair advantage…

OpenseedVC, which backs operators in Africa and Europe starting their companies, reaches first close of $10M fund

A Singapore High Court has effectively approved Pine Labs’ request to shift its operations to India.

Pine Labs gets Singapore court approval to shift base to India

The AI Safety Institute, a U.K. body that aims to assess and address risks in AI platforms, has said it will open a second location in San Francisco. 

UK opens office in San Francisco to tackle AI risk