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Cultured Animal Products
for Foods and Materials
2015 BIO World Congress
What if
animal products could
We have unique capabilities to tune
be
made
better
and
components of the media to give
without
enhanced
cellharming
performance.
animals or the
environment?
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2
By 2050, the demand for animal products is
projected to nearly double
9+
7
BILLION
PEOPLE
60 BILLION
100 BILLION
LAND ANIMALS
LAND ANIMALS
BILLION
PEOPLE
TODAY
2050
Today, the livestock industry is already pushing
planetary resource limits
38%
8%
ICE-FREE
LAND
GLOBAL
WATER
>18%
GREENHOUSE
GASES
Plus: food security, disease risk, chemicals, antibiotics, pesticides,
animal welfare…
Rising meat and hide prices reflect scarcity
and resource limits
US Hide Prices Monthly
The price of meat has
risen ~2.5x in the past
15 years
Hide prices have
fluctuated within a 4x
range in the last 6 years
Source: indexmundi.com
Our solution:
A better process for
growing animal products
directly from animal cells
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Creating an integrated biofabrication platform
MATERIALS
Cell
sourcing
Cell
eng.
Design
Cell
culture
Chemistry
Food
science
FOODS
Tissue
eng.
Material
science
OTHER
Beginning with
Materials
How do we culture leather?
1
2
SOURCE CELLS
GROW CELLS
3
GROW SHEETS
4
5
8
DESIGN
7
FINISH
6
TAN HIDE
LAYER
SHEETS
FUSE LAYERS
We
unveiled
edible
prototype
cultured
We
first
unveiled
edible
prototype
cultured
meat in 2011 and cultured leather in 2013
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Challenges for traditional leather
Bioengineering enables tunable leather
Potential features include: translucency; waterproofing, biological watermarks, embedded
fibers, grown patterns, large sized leather, 3D shapes, ultrathin leather, ultra stretch leather
Culturing food has a long history
99% less
USE OF
LAND
96% less
USE OF
WATER
Source: Tuomisto et al, Environmental Science & Technology (July 2011)
96% less
GREENHOUSE
GASES
cultured
agriculture
cultured
agriculture
cultured
agriculture
cultured
agriculture
Significant resource advantages at scale
45% less
USE OF
ENERGY
Early concept product: “Steak Chips”
o
No harm to animals or environment
o
Pure nutrition: high protein + vitamins – fat
o
Delicious flavor
o
Highest quality ingredients
o
Transparent production
How do we grow cultured steak chips?
1
ISOLATE AND GROW CELLS
2
MULTIPLY CELLS
6
5
COOK IN DEHYDRATOR
ENJOY!
3
ADD PECTIN FOR STRUCTURE
4
ADD SEASONING
AND CALCIUM
Our “steak chip” concept product was tasted
by over 40 delighted participants at
Google’s SolveForX event in 2013,
and has since been enjoyed by
hundreds of others.
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Steak chip tastings
Peter Thiel
Sergey Brin
Marc Andreessen
Peter Diamandis & Jack Hidary
Modern Meadow in numbers
20
10
$15M
FULL TIME
PROFESSIONALS
PATENTS FILED
CAPITAL RAISED
8 PhDs
novel, scalable
approach to growing
large volumes of cells
and tissues
from top-tier
Investors and grants
tissue engineering cell
engineering biochemistry
chemical engineering
bioengineering
biophysics
10,000
chemistry
SQUARE FEET
design and business
world-class cell biology R&D
labs
World class multi-disciplinary team
R&D Lab & HQ (10,000 ft2) in Brooklyn
Thank You
Andras Forgacs
CEO & Co-founder
[email protected]
With support from: