| Literature DB >> 33758465 |
Abstract
Cultured meat involves producing meat from animal cells, not from slaughtered animals. This innovation has the potential to revolutionize the meat industry, with wide implications for the environment, health and animal welfare. The main purpose of this paper is to stimulate some economic research on cultured meat. In particular, this paper includes a prospective discussion on the demand and supply of cultured meat. It also discusses some early results on the environmental impacts of cultured meat, emphasizing the promises (e.g., regarding the reduction in land use) but also the uncertainties. It then argues that cultured meat is a moral improvement compared to conventional meat. Finally, it discusses some regulatory issues, and the need for more public support to the innovation.Entities:
Keywords: Animal welfare; Climate change; Cultured meat; Food innovation; Land use; Meat; Meat consumption; Meat production; Pollution; Regulation
Year: 2021 PMID: 33758465 PMCID: PMC7977488 DOI: 10.1007/s10640-021-00551-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Environ Resour Econ (Dordr) ISSN: 0924-6460
Fig. 1The production process of cultured meat.
Source: Tuomisto (2018). This figure represents the three main stages of the production of cultured meat. First, stem cells are taken from muscle tissue or embryos and are expanded and then differentiated into muscle cells. Second, these cells are further grown in a bioreactor to increase their number. Third, the cells are then transferred to a scaffold to grow these into muscle fibres and larger tissue. (Figure reproduced under the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 Unported Licence (CC BY), https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/)
Fig. 2Comparison of environmental impacts of cultured meat with other meat products.
Source: Rubio et al. (2020). Data are normalized to the impact of beef production. This Figure is slightly adapted from Fig. 5 in Rubio et al. (2020), which uses data from Mattick et al. (2015) and from life-cycle analyses of specific plant-based meat products. (Figure reproduced under the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International Licence, https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/)
Some moral objections to cultured meat and responses. Source: Hopkins and Dacey (2008) and Shaefer and Safulescu (2014)
| Moral objection to cultured meat | Response |
|---|---|
| The conventional meat industry is worse because it treats the entire animal as a mere product. Cultured meat only instrumentalizes cells and tissues | |
| The animal that provides the cells is not altered and the resulting tissue culture is not a new type of organism. The meat industry does alter animals (e.g., genetically) | |
| Our main goal is not to boost our own moral self-regard and virtue, but to relieve animal suffering. Further, people | |
| If appeals against animal suffering are working, they should continue to work when animals suffer, whether or not this suffering may be obviated in the future | |
| What is | |
| Cultured meat would not involve two main moral issues with cannibalism: human killing and corpse desecration. Consumption of human cultured meat could be banned |