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Lab-grown 'clean meat' may hit Indian markets by 2025

Press Trust of India  |  Hyderabad 

Laboratory grown 'clean meat' may become available in by 2025, allowing consumers to enjoy without supporting inhumane and unsustainable industrial animal agriculture, scientists say.

Animal welfare organisation Humane Society International (HSI) and the (CCMB) in have joined hands to develop laboratory grown in

The partnership looks to promote the technology to develop clean while bringing start-ups and regulators together under the same roof.

"Internationally, clean is predicted to hit the market by the end of 2018. In India, we expect it to be available by 2025," Alokparna Sengupta, at HSI India, told

The effort to develop clean has emerged due to the unsustainable methods of large-scale industrial animal

The practices neglect basic animal welfare, and consequently pose a threat to the and

In 2013, the first cultured beef burger (clean meat) was produced and cooked. At that point, the cost of that one patty was USD 375,000.

"However, since then, in the past 5 years, Memphis Meat, a clean company founded by Indian Dr has produced meatballs which cost about USD 1300 and Mosa Meat, the company which produced the beef patty has now brought it down to USD 30 per pound," said Sengupta.

"While the price is still high, research is on across clean companies to reduce the cost further by scaling up the production," she said.

CCMB will also play a role in researching and providing solutions, she said.

For consumers who have a dietary preference for animal clean can be consumed, while eliminating the drawbacks of the current consumption trends.

To produce 'clean meat' cells from an animal are taken and grown outside of the body in a petri dish.

"These cells are 'tricked' into believing they are still in the body and are made to grow," said Sengupta.

Clean production requires far less land and water than conventional production and therefore alleviates repercussions of exponential climatic change, researchers said.

The technology obliterates the severe environmental damages resulting from prevalent in current farming practices.

It does not require antibiotics, produces no bacterial contamination and ensures the welfare of animals.

"The taste will be the same because clean is However, instead of slaughtering an entire animal for different part of its body, the technology in clean can develop those parts based on biopsy taken from different parts of the animals' body," Sengupta said.

"While technology exists to multiply any type of cell, the scaling up of the same in a economically affordable manner as a substitute remains a major challenge," said Rakesh Mishra, at CCMB.

"There may also be cultural and social factors that will need to be addressed for this to be socially acceptable," Mishra said.

"Clean technology is taking the world by storm with even the biggest producers investing in companies developing clean It is time begins this dialogue," said N G Jayasimha, managing for

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Wed, March 28 2018. 18:15 IST
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