Unpalatable truths about laboratory-grown food | Letters

Synthetic meat and fish can ’t, on their own, provide an answer to climate change, arguesIain Climie, whileDavid Ridge envisages technical problems in taking the technology out of the lab, and onto people ’s platesSynthetic meat and fish (Is ‘Frankenfish’ the start of a food revolution?, G2, 21 September) could have huge benefits – although there are cheaper and simpler ways to improve food supplies, including better livestock practices, conservation plus careful use, integrated methods, silviculture and using different animals fed more sensibly. These ideas, technology and cutting waste could massively reduce livestock’ s impact, but nobody wants the bill while benefits could still be lost.Even dramatic reductions in human emissions may not stop the climate change trend. Those most at risk won ’t benefit from technological advances, and the response to climate refugees approaching richer countries can be imagined. More food from less space doesn’t guarantee more room for wildlife; environmentalists often estimate western lifestyles for all would require at least three fully exploited planets. And it isn’t just burgers: biofuels, other cash crops, mineral extraction, suburban sprawl, dams and other developments could outweigh potential gains.  Underlying these concerns are free market idiocies. Resources are looted for short-term gain, having enough is an alien concept and “make more money, buy more stuff” rules. Maybe the world needs to chill ...
Source: Guardian Unlimited Science - Category: Science Authors: Tags: Food science Synthetic biology Environment Food waste Climate change Agriculture Technology Food safety Source Type: news