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Page added on August 5, 2012

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Meat the Food of the Future: Insects

Enviroment

BBC reports that rising food prices, the growing population, and environmental concerns are just a few issues that have food futurologists thinking about what we will eat in the future and how we will eat it. In the UK, meat prices are anticipated to have a huge impact on our diets as some in the food industry prognosticate meat prices could double in the next five to seven years, making meat a luxury item. ‘In the West many of us have grown up with cheap, abundant meat,’ says Morgaine Gaye. ‘Rising prices mean we are now starting to see the return of meat as a luxury. As a result we are looking for new ways to fill the meat gap.’ Insects will become a staple of our diet. They cost less to raise than cattle, consume less water and do not have much of a carbon footprint. Plus, there are an estimated 1,400 species that are edible to man. ‘Things like crickets and grasshoppers will be ground down and used as an ingredient in things like burgers.’ But insects will need an image overhaul if they are to become more palatable to the squeamish Europeans and North Americans, says Gaye. ‘They will become popular when we get away from the word insects and use something like mini-livestock (PDF).’ Another alternative would be lab grown meat as a recent study by Oxford University found growing meat in a lab rather than slaughtering animals would significantly reduce greenhouse gases, energy consumption and water use. Prof Mark Post, who led the Dutch team of scientists at Maastricht University that grew strips of muscle tissue using stem cells taken from cows, says he wants to make lab meat “indistinguishable” from the real stuff, but it could potentially look very different. Finally algae could provide a solution to some the world’s most complex problems, including food shortages as some in the sustainable food industry predict algae farming could become the world’s biggest cropping industry. Like insects, algae could be worked into our diet without us really knowing by using seaweed granules to replace salt in bread and processed foods. ‘The great thing about seaweed is it grows at a phenomenal rate,’ says Dr Craig Rose, executive director of the Seaweed Health Foundation. ‘t’s the fastest growing plant on earth.

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6 Comments on "Meat the Food of the Future: Insects"

  1. DC on Sun, 5th Aug 2012 10:09 pm 

    As long as its not made from people….

  2. Kenz300 on Sun, 5th Aug 2012 10:15 pm 

    Too many people and too few resources….

    The ever growing world population is not sustainable.

  3. Norm on Sun, 5th Aug 2012 10:52 pm 

    YUCK !!!! Here’s how it works. As a rich corporate-liquidator Republican, I’ll stick with a Thanksgiving dinner, turkey, potatoes, gravy, cranberry sauce, and fruit salad.

    Then all you impoverished Democrats, the ex-middle-class, can go eat bugs.

  4. Goat1080 on Sun, 5th Aug 2012 11:58 pm 

    I’m a strict vegetarian, have no use for meat or bugs. Plants rock!

  5. BillT on Mon, 6th Aug 2012 12:58 am 

    Ah Norm, your days are numbered…lol.

    Bet you eat shrimp and crabs and maybe even lobsters. They are only a few genes away from insects. Besides, you have no idea what you will eat to stay alive. Never say never.

  6. pete on Tue, 7th Aug 2012 1:33 am 

    Soylent Green a great show by Chuck Heston, and the last by E.G. Robinson.
    my second favorite next to Silent Running.
    I don’t believe much in global warming but I do believe that all the carbon entering the ocean as carbolic acid is going to change the PH balance of the oceans. Silence of the Lambs for all.

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