Concerns around the environmental
impact of modern farming are causing us to reassess our relationship
with food. But are claims that lab-grown food will replace agriculture in the coming decades realistic? British journalist and environmental activist George Monbiot made a stir last week with the release of his documentary Apocalypse Cow, in which he claims that a technology called “precision fermentation” could make traditional farming obsolete in just a few decades. In an article for The Guardian he
contends that we will be able to produce the vast majority of our
nutrients through industrial-scale brewing of single-celled organisms
specially designed to produce particular compounds. This idea of lab-grown food is
certainly in the ascendancy at the minute. Concerns about the ethics and
environmental impact of meat-eating are leading to growing numbers of
people adopting vegetarianism and veganism, but they’ve also spawned a host of startups promising to grow “cultured meat” in the lab without ever involving real animals. But Monbiot goes further, claiming the same technology could also replace arable farming and would
be orders of magnitude more energy, water, and space-efficient than
current farming practices, which could reverse agriculture’s hugely
damaging effect on the environment. Monbiot isn’t alone in predicting how disruptive precision fermentation could be. A recent report from think tank RethinkX predicted that lab-grown protein will be 10 times cheaper than animal protein by 2035, which will see the US beef and dairy industries’ production fall 50 percent by 2030, effectively bankrupting them. Others are more skeptical,
pointing to the huge practical and cultural barriers to such change—not
least, what to do with the 28 percent of the planet that relies on
agriculture for employment. Some of these criticisms are ideological ripostes to Monbiot’s equally ideological framing of the case, while farming lobbies have inevitably had their say. But others have highlighted some of the holes in the logic behind his claims. In making his case for lab-grown
food, Monbiot highlights the technology of Solar Foods, which uses solar
energy to split water into oxygen and hydrogen to provide energy for
microbes that then produce feedstocks. He claims this process is ten
times as efficient as photosynthesis, and because everything is done in
vats the land efficiency is roughly 20,000 times greater than arable
farming. But the company clarified to New Scientist that when you take into account the land required for solar panels, it would only be around ten
times more efficient than farming soya. More importantly, renewable
energy like solar is still a limited resource at present, and one that
can only be expanded so fast. Diverting it to power agriculture would inevitably lead to boosting carbon emissions elsewhere. And research has already shown that cultured meat produced using less sustainable energy sources could actually be worse for the climate...MORE
Issues of concern to people who live in the west: property rights, water rights, endangered species, livestock grazing, energy production, wilderness and western agriculture. Plus a few items on western history, western literature and the sport of rodeo... Frank DuBois served as the NM Secretary of Agriculture from 1988 to 2003. DuBois is a former legislative assistant to a U.S. Senator, a Deputy Assistant Secretary of Interior, and is the founder of the DuBois Rodeo Scholarship.
Monday, January 20, 2020
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