Register

Peak Oil is You


Donate Bitcoins ;-) or Paypal :-)


Page added on May 14, 2013

Bookmark and Share

Grub’s up! Insects could feed the world

BEETLES, caterpillars and wasps could supplement diets around the world as an environmentally friendly food source if only Western consumers could get over their “disgust”, the UN’s Food and Agriculture Organisation says.

“The main message is really: `Eat insects’,” Eva Mueller, director of forest economics at the FAO, told a press conference in Rome on Monday.

“Insects are abundant and they are a valuable source of protein and minerals,” she said.

edible insects

Australian witchetty grubs can be eaten raw or cooked and are sold in Asia, Europe and the US.

“Two billion people, a third of the world’s population, are already eating insects because they are delicious and nutritious,” she said.

Also speaking at the press conference was Gabon Forestry Minister Gabriel Tchango who said: “Insect consumption is part of our daily life.”

edible insects

Locusts on sale in the Netherlands. (AP Photo/Paul Vantomme, FAO, ho)

He said some insects, like beetle larvae and grilled termites, were delicacies.

“Insects contribute about 10 per cent of animal protein consumed by the population,” he said.

edible insects

Look good? This is a meal of insects. (AP Photo/Thomas Calame, FAO, ho)

The report said insect farming was “one of the many ways to address food and feed insecurity”.

“Insects are everywhere and they reproduce quickly, and they have high growth and feed conversion rates and a low environmental footprint,” said the report, co-authored by the FAO and Wageningen University in the Netherlands.

edible insects

A woman holding a plate of insects during an insect cuisine competition at an unknown location in Laos. (AP Photo/Thomas Calame, FAO, ho)

But the authors admitted that “consumer disgust remains one of the largest barriers to the adoption of insects as viable sources of protein in many Western countries”.

It suggested that the food industry could help in “raising the status of insects” by including them in recipes and putting them on restaurant menus.

The report also called for wider use of insects as feed for livestock, saying that poor regulation and under-investment currently meant it “cannot compete” with traditional sources of feed.

“The use of insects on a large scale as a feed ingredient is technically feasible, and established companies in various parts of the world are already leading the way,” it added, highlighting in particular producers in China, South Africa, Spain and the United States.

“Insects can supplement traditional feed sources such as soy, maize, grains and fishmeal,” it said, adding that the ones with most potential were larvae of the black soldier fly, the common housefly and the yellow mealworm.

The report also said the insects most commonly consumed by humans are beetles (31 per cent), caterpillars (18 per cent) and bees, wasps and ants (14 per cent), followed by grasshoppers, locusts and crickets (13 per cent).

It said trade in insects was thriving in cities such as Bangkok and Kinshasa and that a similar culture of insect consumption – entomophagy – should be established elsewhere, stressing that it was often cheaper to farm insects.

The report concluded: “History has shown that dietary patterns can change quickly, particularly in a globalised world. The rapid acceptance of raw fish in the form of sushi is a good example.”

Perth Now



9 Comments on "Grub’s up! Insects could feed the world"

  1. KingM on Tue, 14th May 2013 10:57 am 

    Nah. Only poor people eat insects. As soon as people can get a little chicken or pork, they quickly abandon insect eating.

    And we’re already past the point where there are more fat people than hungry people on the planet. The amount of food that currently goes to waste would be more than enough to feed those other hungry people.

  2. peakyeast on Tue, 14th May 2013 11:20 am 

    The desperation is getting palpable.

    We will NOT control our own reproduction.

    We MUST escalate this situation until we eat our own sh!t and are waiting for the old guy next door to die to get our next meal with protein.

    What a glorious future our leaders (and a large portion of the population) wish us to have !!

  3. TIKIMAN on Tue, 14th May 2013 12:44 pm 

    More liberal BS from the Nazi’s in the UN. Anyone who supports the UN needs to have their head examined or shot.

  4. NP on Tue, 14th May 2013 1:05 pm 

    I’ve eaten insects a few times when I’ve been in SE-asia, some of them are actually quite good tasting, others are probably best described as an “acquired taste”.

    If the choice is between making more use of insects as food or widespread malnutrition, insects suddenly look like a very attractive option.

    In any case I think insects are an underutilized resource, the first widespread use of insects in the western world would probably be as animal feed?

  5. BillT on Tue, 14th May 2013 3:29 pm 

    And like anything else, when 7 billion people start munching down on them, they too will disappear. Not to mention that climate change is going to decimate a lot of them in the near future.

  6. GregT on Tue, 14th May 2013 4:35 pm 

    MMMMM,

    Beetle larvae, termites, and locusts, served up with a glass of fine Bordeaux.

  7. J-Gav on Tue, 14th May 2013 4:58 pm 

    I actually did eat some fried ants in Panama when I was a kid – nice and crunchy but it was only because they were chocolate-covered that I went for ’em … I’ll have mine with a nice bottle of Mercury from Burgundy, GregT.

  8. J-Gav on Tue, 14th May 2013 5:04 pm 

    Also had a generous offer to share some of those big, white, juicy larvae the admirable Mentawai people pulled out of rotten logs in a Sumatran jungle. I confess I pleaded “not at all hungry” to get out of that one …

  9. rollin on Tue, 14th May 2013 8:31 pm 

    KingM is right on this one. The US wastes 50 percent of it’s food. Crazy.

    I notice all those old documentary films from the first half of the 20th century, most of the people are pretty skinny. Meals were eaten at mealtime, snacking between got a smacking from Mom. They actually had to walk and work too, not like today’s cubicle lifeforms.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *