Lab-grown meat is certainly going to be less climate-friendly, less healthy, and more expensive than legumes, whole grains, and nuts (and most processed products made from these ingredients[1])—e.g. red meat is carcinogenic no matter what the source is. For the moment, lab meat is mostly a venture-funded pipe dream.
On the other hand, legumes, whole grains, and nuts are scaled, cheap, healthy, and proven in pretty much every way.
[1] There are pitfalls, of course, such as products that include things like carrageenan, saturated fats, artificial colorants, or too much salt. But you can check for those and skip the offenders.
I understand that veggies exist. That’s irrelevant to my desire to eat delicious meat that doesn’t come from conscious organisms capable of suffering. Avoiding meat is entirely ethically-based for me.
Coffee is carcinogenic. So are roasted veggies, as well as common food additives. There’s reasonable risk mitigation and then there’s unreasonable (and impossible) risk elimination. I balance health and quality of life.
I don’t think the climate impact of lab-grown meat (when, not if, it is perfected) would be anywhere near the emissions of CAFOs. That’s an absurd area to focus on in place of targeting CAFOs, car emissions, jets, etc. that actually are significant sources of emissions.
That really depends on how dark you need your veggies.
as well as common food additives.
And you can often avoid them easily. Granted, you may be US-based which may make finding good food harder.
I don’t think the climate impact of lab-grown meat (when, not if, it is perfected) would be anywhere near the emissions of CAFOs.
As yet, that’s entirely unclear. Right now, most of the companies in the space are pretty tight-lipped. We know that at scale, these companies will need a ton of electricity and they will also need input nutrients, aka perfectly human-edible plants. Some of the calories going in will be lost. How much, we don’t know, because right now these companies have no scale and are mostly in a transitional phase where they are replacing animal-based input nutrients.
That’s an absurd area to focus on
Going vegan is an immediate, effective, and cost-neutral climate-positive thing you can do individually. It can shave around 1 to 2t of CO2e/year from your impact and it also helps with a host of other issues (water, land use, species extinction, animal cruelty, …).
15% of global CO2e emissions are from agriculture, the vast majority is directly or indirectly caused by animal agriculture. That number is higher in countries with a high-meat diet.
Reducing land use actually allows for rewilding, thus allowing for offsetting additional emissions.
in place of
“I can’t do thing X because I am doing unrelated thing Y” seems like a logical fallacy.
targeting CAFOs,
The only thing to replace those at scale, right now, is plants. “Grass-fed” is sleight-of-hand bushlit. Lab-grown meats at scale are probably ten years out from now.
As usual, there’s no need for a complex technological solution that’s worse than the solution we already have.
I say “as usual” because there are a lot of these: public transit v/ self-driving/electric cars; packaging deposit systems v/ plastics recycling; just consuming fewer products v/ CO2-optimizing bullshit products; … The commonality between all of these examples is that the underlying conflict is public benefit v/ some investor getting rich.
car emissions, jets, etc. that actually are significant sources of emissions.
No doubt these need to be targeted as well — but for one, individually, you (probably) can’t do much about any of them. For two, if you can optimize or help influence decision-making, go for it.
I just want cruelty-free lab-grown meat… That would also eliminate the environmental impact of CAFOS/factory farms.
Lab-grown meat is certainly going to be less climate-friendly, less healthy, and more expensive than legumes, whole grains, and nuts (and most processed products made from these ingredients[1])—e.g. red meat is carcinogenic no matter what the source is. For the moment, lab meat is mostly a venture-funded pipe dream.
On the other hand, legumes, whole grains, and nuts are scaled, cheap, healthy, and proven in pretty much every way.
[1] There are pitfalls, of course, such as products that include things like carrageenan, saturated fats, artificial colorants, or too much salt. But you can check for those and skip the offenders.
I understand that veggies exist. That’s irrelevant to my desire to eat delicious meat that doesn’t come from conscious organisms capable of suffering. Avoiding meat is entirely ethically-based for me.
Coffee is carcinogenic. So are roasted veggies, as well as common food additives. There’s reasonable risk mitigation and then there’s unreasonable (and impossible) risk elimination. I balance health and quality of life.
I don’t think the climate impact of lab-grown meat (when, not if, it is perfected) would be anywhere near the emissions of CAFOs. That’s an absurd area to focus on in place of targeting CAFOs, car emissions, jets, etc. that actually are significant sources of emissions.
Apparently it’s quite the opposite.
That really depends on how dark you need your veggies.
And you can often avoid them easily. Granted, you may be US-based which may make finding good food harder.
As yet, that’s entirely unclear. Right now, most of the companies in the space are pretty tight-lipped. We know that at scale, these companies will need a ton of electricity and they will also need input nutrients, aka perfectly human-edible plants. Some of the calories going in will be lost. How much, we don’t know, because right now these companies have no scale and are mostly in a transitional phase where they are replacing animal-based input nutrients.
Going vegan is an immediate, effective, and cost-neutral climate-positive thing you can do individually. It can shave around 1 to 2t of CO2e/year from your impact and it also helps with a host of other issues (water, land use, species extinction, animal cruelty, …).
15% of global CO2e emissions are from agriculture, the vast majority is directly or indirectly caused by animal agriculture. That number is higher in countries with a high-meat diet.
Reducing land use actually allows for rewilding, thus allowing for offsetting additional emissions.
“I can’t do thing X because I am doing unrelated thing Y” seems like a logical fallacy.
The only thing to replace those at scale, right now, is plants. “Grass-fed” is sleight-of-hand bushlit. Lab-grown meats at scale are probably ten years out from now.
As usual, there’s no need for a complex technological solution that’s worse than the solution we already have.
I say “as usual” because there are a lot of these: public transit v/ self-driving/electric cars; packaging deposit systems v/ plastics recycling; just consuming fewer products v/ CO2-optimizing bullshit products; … The commonality between all of these examples is that the underlying conflict is public benefit v/ some investor getting rich.
No doubt these need to be targeted as well — but for one, individually, you (probably) can’t do much about any of them. For two, if you can optimize or help influence decision-making, go for it.
https://www.thekampungvegan.com/recipes/homemade-tofu
https://theveganatlas.com/homemade-seitan-recipe/
https://veganlovlie.com/how-to-make-tempeh-easy-method/
next up: “how to soak legumes”
https://overthefirecooking.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/05/PhotoMay15-2C64345AM.jpg
https://therecipecritic.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/12/airfryerbacon.jpg
https://www.thespruceeats.com/thmb/UrkHTfByhIhBrtDvL01dNx4dYV4=/3579x2386/filters:fill(auto,1)/whole-stuffed-chicken-32014h1-5b6b4027c9e77c005046be25.jpg
I avoid meat for ethical implications. Meat is tasty as hell and I will gladly eat lab-grown meat once it’s perfected.
Why are you posting these pictures?
(That you’re getting upvotes for these thoughtless no-effort posts makes me think something’s wrong with this community.)
It was a sarcastic response to
yourtheir unprompted recipes that were totally irrelevant to my comment.Might want to check the author of the other comment.
Oh yeah, my bad. I honestly don’t pay a whole lot of attention to usernames…