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FuturologyBot t1_ixmmw72 wrote

The following submission statement was provided by /u/tim_b_er:


Excerpt: It may sound like science fiction, but the techniques being used to cultivate lab-grown meat are actually pretty similar to production methods we’ve already been using for centuries. “Making beer is actually cell agriculture.” says Luining. “You’re using an organism for beer. This is yeast, and you’re feeding it hops and grains to create another product. And this is exactly what we’re doing.”

I am incredibly fascinated by this area of research. My thesis is that it will catch on far quicker than most people assume. It will definitely be a rocky transition in culture, habits, and societal acceptance, but it is becoming clear that lab grown meat is on the pathway to becoming commercially viable. Likely beginning with high end product offerings at restaurants (a Michelin-starred chef has already teamed up with a cultured meat company), and then going down market to provide alternatives to every major traditional animal product.

Personally, my passion is in researching and investing in the companies that I believe have the best chance at playing a significant role in this movement. There are very few options, and this isn't the sub to discuss them in. But if anyone wants to discuss that aspect please do message me, I'd welcome the conversation.


Please reply to OP's comment here: https://old.reddit.com/r/Futurology/comments/z3ni3f/fast_company_brew_thanksgiving_turkey_in_future/ixmipam/

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