UK – Britain is set to become the first European country to embrace lab-grown meat, as the Animal and Plant Health Agency and the Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs give the green light to Meatly, a pioneering British company specializing in cultivated meat for pets. 

Meatly’s innovative product, which is derived from chicken cells, will undergo feeding trials in August, marking a significant step forward in the pet food industry.

Meatly’s cultivated chicken is created by extracting a sample from a chicken egg, enriching it with vitamins and amino acids, and allowing the cells to grow in a controlled environment akin to beer fermentation. 

The end product is a paté-like paste, expected to hit the market later this year. 

Meatly aims to focus on reducing production costs and scaling up to industrial levels within three years, potentially blending the meat with vegetables to lower expenses.

The approval of lab-grown pet food in the UK highlights a growing opportunity for biotech entrepreneurs, particularly following Britain’s departure from the European Union. 

The British government is keen to position the country as a leader in biotechnology.

In December, the UK government unveiled a significant US$2.5B investment plan over the next ten years, targeting advancements in research, development, and infrastructure. 

This ambitious initiative prominently includes support for the UK’s burgeoning cultivated meat industry. 

The announcement was meant to prevent the risk of lagging behind nations like Singapore and the US, where the sale of lab-grown meat has already been sanctioned, potentially prompting UK-based firms to relocate to more favorable markets.

Despite the regulatory hurdles, the UK’s cultivated meat sector is witnessing notable growth. 

The UK Research and Innovation (UKRI) agency has significantly ramped up its investments in alternative proteins, allocating more funds last year alone than in the previous decade combined, with a substantial portion directed toward cultivated meat.

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