California lab-grown meat start-up gets first green light by AFP Staff Writers San Francisco (AFP) Nov 17, 2022 A California-based lab-grown meat start-up received the first green light for such products from the US food safety agency on Wednesday, although the product still has more hurdles to clear before being sold to consumers. The US Food and Drug Administration said it carried out a "careful evaluation" of Upside Foods' cultivated chicken, including data and information provided by the company, and had "no further questions at this time," signaling a go-ahead for the firm. "We started UPSIDE amid a world full of skeptics, and today, we've made history again as the first company to receive a 'No Questions' letter from the FDA for cultivated meat," founder and CEO Uma Valeti said in a press release. The FDA specified that the evaluation did not constitute "an approval process." Upside Foods will still have to undergo inspection by the US Department of Agriculture, for example, before it can sell its products. That said, this "is a watershed moment in the history of food," Valeti said. Several start-ups are aiming to produce so-called lab-grown meat, which would allow humans to consume animal protein without harming the environment through farming and without any animal suffering. These products differ from plant-based substitutes such as soy burgers that mimic the texture and flavor of meat but do not contain any animal protein. The start-up Eat Just, a competitor of Upside Foods, was the first to receive authorization to make artificial meat, in Singapore in 2020. While succeeding in the general lab-meat market has proven complicated and expensive, some companies have set their sights on petfood, whose consumers are much less picky. Bond Pet Foods, a Colorado start-up, is creating animal protein from a microbial fermentation process to feed dogs.
GMO skeptics still distrust big agriculture's climate pitch New York (AFP) Nov 13, 2022 As a changing climate intensifies extreme weather, agricultural multinationals are hyping the ability of genetically modified crops to boost yields when facing drought, heat or even heavy rainfall. But skeptics of engineered foods, or genetically modified organisms (GMOs), still aren't buying it. "I don't see why we should evolve our views when they're still doing the same things," said Bill Freese, science director at the non-profit Center for Food Safety, criticizing the "dramatically increase ... read more
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