Wednesday, June 12, 2024

‘Techno Foods’ Won’t Feed the World


‘Techno Foods’ Won’t Feed the World — But They’ll Make Tech Entrepreneurs Richer


Foods invented in laboratories and produced in factories won’t improve the quantity or quality of our food supply, so who benefits? The business entrepreneurs who see food as a commodity to be patented and profited from.

Over millennia we have evolved with our food supply, relying on the collective wisdom of farmers to grow foods that sustain human life.

Increasingly, however, food is being produced by business entrepreneurs who see food as a commodity to be patented and profited from. Their techno foods are invented in laboratories, produced in factories and promoted with the claim they can feed the world while saving it from climate change.

It started about two decades ago when a giant U.S. chemical company (Monsanto) invented genetically modified (GM) crops and sold them to farmers with one main promise. GM crops could be sprayed with Monsanto‘s glyphosate, killing the weeds, but not the crop — saving farmers time and money by reducing the use of pesticides.

The opposite happened. Glyphosate spraying left more, not less, toxic residues in food and animal feed and caused cancer (non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma) in American farming communities.

When greenhouse gases from livestock farming were shown to be contributing to climate change, a Silicon Valley company, Impossible Foods, claimed it could reduce the carbon footprint of meat production by making it in laboratories.

They created the Impossible Burger, which was fake meat made from an assortment of highly processed ingredients, including soy leghemoglobin derived from GM yeast and 46 additional yeast proteins — some of which were unidentified and untested for safety.

Fake milk was next on the agenda. Synbio or synthetic biology (precision fermentation) genetically modifies yeast, fungi, algae or bacteria to produce animal proteins which are then “fermented” in vats or “bioreactors,” and the resulting “milk” claims to contain “proteins identical to those found in cow’s milk.”

However, when John Fagan, Ph.D., at the Health Research Institute, conducted an analysis comparing cow’s milk to synbio milk he found essential nutrients in real milk missing in synbio milk, including vitamin E.

The amino acid composition of one whey protein was 57% different from cow’s milk and a second was 46% different. The synbio milk contained 92 small molecules that have never been part of the human diet and whose identity is totally unknown to science.

Lab meat (or cellular meat) is not “fake” meat but is an attempt to grow real meat in a laboratory. Stem cells are taken from a live animal and placed in a man-made soup of genetically modified growth hormones and other synthetic “nutrients” which are brewed together in steel vats or bioreactors.

Growing cells into real meat, however, has proven to be difficult and ultimately may be scientifically unachievable. The infrastructure required is vast, expensive to build and dependent on massive, consistent and costly energy inputs.

Scaling up production to meet market demand is proving to be almost impossible as contamination in the bioreactors is a frequent and fatal occurrence. Cellular meat has been massively hyped, but to date there has been no meaningful evaluation of its nutritional value.

If growing meat and milk in laboratories is problematic, the techno foods sector aims to invent even more unrealistic products. Investors have given $3.5 million to Biomilq, a company that claims they can make lab-grown human breast milk.

Funding was given to a company that plans to make woolly mammoth meatballs (using elephant DNA to fill in “gaps” in the mammoth DNA) and finance was provided to a group wanting to make lab-grown pet food (a lightly regulated sector whose consumers will eat anything).

Techno foods demonstrate that everything imaginable is not necessarily achievable. Perhaps food production should be brought back down to earth.


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