Cultivated meat on a farm? Putting farmers at the centre of a new technology

Farmers have traditionally been concerned about cultivated meat. A recent report​ by the Royal Agricultural University (RAU) in the UK found that​ despite openness to its opportunities, UK farmers had many concerns about its impact on communities. A note earlier this year to the European Council suggested that​ cultivated meat was a danger to traditional farming practices. In its decision to ban the production of cultivated meat, Italy’s government cited farmers​.

However, what if farmers were not challenged by cultivated meat, but were the ones producing it?

Start-ups in the Netherlands and Germany have developed technology that aims to enable farmers to produce cultivated meat on their land, utilising the abundance of livestock for cells and the primacy of the local approach.

While neither company has regulatory approval in the nascent industry, they both aim to help put farmers at the centre of cultivated meat.

Decentralising cultivated meat

Cultivated meat, as far as it is actually produced, is usually made industrially. Cultivated meat produced on farms is done so in smaller quantities, on a more local level. It is, in the words of the RAU’s report, ‘decentralised.’

“Conventional cultivated meat production aims at large bioreactor vessels in an industrial gigafactory-like complex. All the production is centralised in one large facility. In our concept the main production of cultivated meat happens on the farms,” Alexander Heuer, co-founder and co-CEO of German start-up Meatosys, told FoodNavigator.

Its plug and ply bioreactors are housed in 40ft (12.2m) shipping containers, residing on the premises of individual farmers. The company only covers the steps in the value chain that need specialised lab equipment. The final growth and differentiation will be done on farm.