Critical review of cultivated meat from a Nordic perspective
Reviewartikel, 2024

Background: Cultivated meat is a novel technology with the potential to partly substitute conventional meat in the future. Production of cultivated meat is based on biotechnology for tissue engineering, up-scaling of cell cultures and stem-cell differentiation, providing the basis for large-scale proliferation of the parent cell and subsequent differentiation into primitive skeletal muscle structures known from conventional meat. Development of cultivated meat is considered a socio-technological challenge including a variety of technical, sustainability, ethical, and consumer acceptance issues. Scope and approach: As the Nordic countries share common history and roots of food culture, cultivated meat will be introduced into a socio-cultural context with established food traditions. This review summarizes the current knowledge and activities on the development of cultivated meat in the Nordic countries and considers this novel food product in a specific socio-cultural context. Key findings and conclusions: The production of cultivated meat in the Nordic countries, must encompass solutions that are accepted by the typical Nordic consumer. In general, this favors solutions for cell culturing based on non-GMO cells and locally accessible raw material for cell medias and scaffolding. From the perspective of the Nordic countries, this will improve the environmental, societal, and ethical context of cultivated meat.

Future animal-based proteins

Sustainable proteins

Lab meat

Cultured meat

In vitro meat

Författare

Martin Krøyer Rasmussen

Aarhus Universitet

Julie Gold

Chalmers, Fysik, Nano- och biofysik

Matthias W. Kaiser

Universitetet i Bergen

Jana Moritz

Helsingin Yliopisto

Niko Räty

Helsingin Yliopisto

Sissel Beate Rønning

Nofima

Toni Ryynänen

Helsingin Yliopisto

Stig Skrivergaard

Aarhus Universitet

Anna Ström

Chalmers, Kemi och kemiteknik, Tillämpad kemi

Margrethe Therkildsen

Aarhus Universitet

Hanna L. Tuomisto

Helsingin Yliopisto

Naturresursinstitutet (Luke)

Jette Feveile Young

Aarhus Universitet

Trends in Food Science and Technology

0924-2244 (ISSN)

Vol. 144 104336

Ämneskategorier

Livsmedelsvetenskap

DOI

10.1016/j.tifs.2024.104336

Mer information

Senast uppdaterat

2024-02-02