•  Dee   ( @Dee_Imaginarium@beehaw.org ) 
      link
      fedilink
      English
      27
      edit-2
      1 year ago

      I was going to say, all the articles and science I saw on lab meat previously had it consuming far, far less resources than the traditional beef industry. Definitely going to read more about it but I’m still team lab meat for now.

      Edit:

      “But in a preprint, not yet peer-reviewed, researchers at the University of California…” That’s not a good start to their point.

      The comments on that preprint by another expert also don’t seem promising on their conclusions of lab grown.

      I’ll believe it’s worse than traditional beef when more science substantiates that view. This article isn’t that.

      • Even if cultivated meat was initially bad for the environment, I’d guess that it would be easy to minimize it’s environmental impact versus traditional meat. There’s only so much you can do to stop cows from belching CO2. However, a factory making vats of cultured meat could install pollution controls to reduce their emissions.

        I’d definitely like to see peer reviewed studies backing everything up, but my guess is that cultivated meat will on par with or be better for the environment than traditional meat and will only get better.

      •  ffmike   ( @ffmike@beehaw.org ) 
        link
        fedilink
        English
        121 year ago

        Yeah so far it seems to be battling experts. UC Davis is a big agriculture/animal science school. On the other hand I don’t trust the lab meat industry’s own experts either. Hoping at some point to see a credible neutral analysis.

    • I’ve read it, and there’s already two issues:

      • Not peer reviewed, so more margin of error
      • It says that it will only be worse if the stuff needed to make lab grown meat is purified at pharmaceutical levels; if the stuff is food grade then the claim begins falls apart.
    • I think it’s odd to even compare. One is a brand new industry, the other is a hundreds of year old process in terms of learning how to make it efficient. Over time, I have no doubt lab-grown can out-carbon footprint actual cattle raising.

        • Oh, I did see some of them later, but thank you for the heads-up!

          I noticed it wasn’t peer-reviewed, but when they mentioned the process and I started to imagine all it must take to cultivate meat in a lab, it started to seem that it could be a lot worse for the environment than I had really considered, and it didn’t seem implausible that it could be worse than farmed meat.

          Either way, at this point I would be willing to bet it definitely isn’t as sustainable as just eating plant based food, so I’d rather stick with that for now; I’m accustomed to it already anyway.