Sativied
Well-Known Member
Yes can't feed the 10bil expected population in the same way we do now and also reach climate goals. And already 2/3rd is undernourished or obese. 70% of farmland in Europe is used to create food for animals. With PF, countries can be self-sufficient. One of the reasons EU is all over it.but with more people coming into this world over the next ten years comes more demand for nutrition and there are already too many people experiencing undernourishment at this time.
"Simply because plant-based and alternative proteins remain one of the most powerful weapons against climate change " - Deloitte
The solar market in Germany initially boomed a few years ago because of government subsidies. ASML in NL (manufacturer of printers for most of the advanced chips) made possible lots of government subsidies. It sure looks like this could end up the same.
In 2022 NL pumped 60mil of the national grow fund in education for 'clean meat' and PF. Not just universities, lower level too. Considering the population difference, that's 1.2bil in US. For education to make sure there are enough qualified people to work in the sector, which there currently aren't. Small potatoes compared to the total amount of money being invested now and in the coming years.
Wageningen University started a lab in Food Valley (there's quite a few areas in Europe that aren't actually valleys but are sillicon valley status wannabees), huge fermentation tank, where students, researchers and companies (including farmers) work together. Not in a weird science project, but how to turn it into products and trade. De-risk by collaboration, VOC mentality...
"To scale." Unilever... if it's a houshold name in NL, overpriced, sold because of funny or cool commercials, it's from Unilever. They're like the Shell of supermarket products. Moved to UK before Shell did. Palm oil is in 50% of all supermarket products. I don't care so much for the prophecies, but that sounds like gospel (good news) to me (palm oil production is devastating). Nestle, Danone, all the big dairy and food companies joined the race.
A key part of the EU Green Deal is to be climate-neutral by 2050, affecting all industries, including agriculture. Reduction of livestock and farmers was already a given, farmers are already bought out (we just bought out a good part of the fishing fleet too), their subsidies will continue to reduce, the climate regulations and animal welfare demands increase. Belgium has the same problem as NL, West of Germany, North of France similar. In 2030-2035, there already will be far less farmers to resist progress.
"If we remain on track for an 11% share for alternative proteins by 2035, we will see a
reduction of 0.85 gigaton of CO2 equivalent (CO2e) worldwide by 2030 – equal to
decarbonising 95% of the aviation industry"
And that's just the CO2 output, the benefits are abundant it would take off even if we had taken better care of the planet.