[lit-ideas] Lab grown meat

  • From: JimKandJulieB@xxxxxxx
  • To: lit-ideas@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
  • Date: Sat, 13 Aug 2005 12:26:01 EDT

_Click here:  BBC NEWS | Science/Nature | Scientists aim for lab-grown meat_ 
(http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/science/nature/4148164.stm)  
 
Talk about sci-fi -- I just keep getting flashbacks of Soylent  Green........
 
<<  

Scientists aim for lab-grown meat 
An international research team has proposed new techniques that  may lead to 
the mass production of meat reared not on the farm, but in the  laboratory.  
Developments in tissue engineering mean that cells taken from animals could  
be grown directly into meat in a laboratory, the researchers say.  
Scientists believe the technology already exists to directly grow processed  
meat like a chicken nugget.  
The technology could benefit both humans and the environment.  
"With a single cell, you could theoretically produce the world's annual meat  
supply. And you could do it in a way that's better for the environment and 
human  health.  
"In the long term, this is a very feasible idea," said Jason Matheny of the  
University of Maryland, part of the team whose research has been published in  
the Tissue Engineering journal.  
Growing the meat without the animal could reduce the need to keep millions of 
 animals in cramped conditions and would lessen the damage caused by the meat 
 production to the environment.  
Laboratory-grown meat could also be healthier, proponents say.  
Eating 'mush'  
Tissue engineering techniques were first developed for medical use and small  
amounts of edible fish tissue have been grown in research conducted by Nasa.  

To industrialise the process, researchers suggest the cells could  be grown 
on large sheets that would need to be stretched to provide the  'exercise' for 
the growing muscles.  
"If you didn't stretch them, it would be like eating mush," said Mr Methany.  
Whilst the technology to produce processed meat is here now, producing a  
steak or chicken breast is still quite a way off, the researchers say.  
Questions  
The new techniques could also provide a dilemma for vegetarians.  
Some may feel able to eat meat that has been grown without an animal being  
harmed.  
Others feel that question marks remain about the way the cells would be taken 
 from animals.  
"It won't appeal to someone who gave up meat because they think it's morally  
wrong to eat flesh or someone who doesn't want to eat anything unnatural," 
Kerry  Bennett of the UK Vegetarian Society told the Guardian newspaper.  
How regulators might react is also unclear.  
The US Food and Drug Administration has asked companies not to market any  
products that involve cloned animals until their safety has been evaluated.  

Story from BBC  NEWS:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/pr/fr/-/2/hi/science/nature/4148164.stm

Published:  2005/08/13 11:52:01 GMT

© BBC MMV


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