Abstract
Meat production through agriculture is a significant contributor to climate change yet it is a staple food and a major source of protein in many diets around the world. As such a protein arms race has begun to develop sustainable protein sources with plant-based, insect and lab grown alternatives emerging as top contenders. Cultivated meat, animal cells grown in vitro for consumption as food, is an emerging technology that is often seen as a more sustainable alternative to traditional meat production by virtue of the fact it avoids many of the heavily polluting agricultural processes such as enteric fermentation and fertiliser use. The first life cycle assessments (LCA) of cultivated meat shone a favourable light on the environmental impacts of cultivated meat. However, as the technology develops and more representative LCAs are conducted the environmental impact potentials are greater than originally reported due to a greater understanding of the technology. This paper examines existing LCAs of cultivated meat and identifies data gaps and potential improvements within the cultivated meat production system.
This work highlights that there are still many data gaps that exist around the environmental impacts of cultivated meat. Specifically, modelling of growth factor production at suitable scale for a cultivated meat industry, the impact of cell line production and storage, production of scaffold materials, and downstream processes after removal from bioreactors are required to accurately assess the impacts of cultivated meat production. As such there needs to be further collaboration between LCA practitioners and cultivated meat producers to fully realise any environmental benefits or burdens that cultivated meat may have at commercial scale.
This work highlights that there are still many data gaps that exist around the environmental impacts of cultivated meat. Specifically, modelling of growth factor production at suitable scale for a cultivated meat industry, the impact of cell line production and storage, production of scaffold materials, and downstream processes after removal from bioreactors are required to accurately assess the impacts of cultivated meat production. As such there needs to be further collaboration between LCA practitioners and cultivated meat producers to fully realise any environmental benefits or burdens that cultivated meat may have at commercial scale.
| Original language | English |
|---|---|
| Article number | 100007 |
| Number of pages | 10 |
| Journal | Cleaner Food Systems |
| Volume | 2 |
| Early online date | 22 Nov 2025 |
| DOIs | |
| Publication status | Published - 31 Dec 2025 |
Bibliographical note
This work was funded as an EPSRC manufacturing research hub for a sustainable future (REF EP/X038114/1): Cellular Agriculture Manufacturing Hub (CARMA) https://carmahub.co.uk/. Click or tap if you trust this link.">https://carmahub.co.uk/Data Availability Statement
Data will be made available on request.Acknowledgements
The authors would like to thank all researchers involved in the CARMA Hub for fruitful discussions.Funding
This work was funded as an EPSRC manufacturing research hub for a sustainable future (REF EP/X038114/1): Cellular Agriculture Manufacturing Hub (CARMA) https://carmahub.co.uk/. Click or tap if you trust this link.">https://carmahub.co.uk/
| Funders | Funder number |
|---|---|
| EPSRC | REF EP/X038114/1 |
Keywords
- Cellular agriculture
- Novel food
- Cell culture
- Life cycle assessment