Florida Just Banned Lab-Grown Meat, I Tried to Find Out Why

is the conservative war on cultivated meat a matter of protecting the beef lobby, protecting consumers, or a third more mysterious thing (owning the libs)?
River Page

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Conversations have been edited for clarity and brevity.

On March 6th, the Florida House of Representatives passed legislation prohibiting the manufacture and sale of cultivated or “lab-grown” meat in Florida. Governor DeSantis is expected to sign the bill, and when he does Florida will become the first state to ban cultivated meat. Other states, including Arizona, New Hampshire, and Alabama are considering similar bans. What is the fight over cultivated meat really about? Is it economics, with one industry lobbying for protection from another? Is it the culture war, pitting red-blooded, carnivorous Americans against effete cosmopolitan environmentalists? Or is this truly a question of safety, as the state government, apparently in conflict with the FDA, has argued? I reached out to a cultivated meat CEO and a Florida GOP Representative, exploring all of this and more.

“The beef industry, specifically the Cattleman’s Association, is behind this,” said Josh March, referring to the push to ban cultivated meat in Florida. March is the CEO of Sci-Fi Foods, a start-up that produces cultivated beef. “It’s straight-up protectionism.”

It’s no secret that the Florida Cattleman’s Association (FCA) has lobbied to ban cultivated meat in Florida, or that it has some influence in the state. Through its fittingly named “Florida Cow PAC,” the FCA gave $10k to another PAC in 2021 to conduct a fundraiser for the President of the Florida Senate. Since 2017, it has contributed $75,000 to Ron DeSantis, more than any other candidate, and has spent $72,000 on the Florida Republican Senatorial Campaign Committee during the same period. It has also maxed out campaign donations to Agriculture Commissioner Willard Simpson, and several state legislators who were instrumental in pushing the cultivated meat ban, including Danny Alvarez, Clay Yarbrough, and Tyer Sirois. Still, the maximum contributions are fairly low in Florida, at $3,000 for a statewide office and just $1,000 for legislative seats. While not exactly nothing, is this really enough to buy a party?

Unsurprisingly, supporters of the bill say protectionism has nothing to do with it. “Protecting them from what? A product that doesn’t exist yet?” said Florida State Representative Dean Black, a Republican from Jacksonville and supporter of the ban. When I asked why he thought the FCA had lobbied for the ban, he said that “they believe they have a product that is safe,” and noted that he was a fifth generation Florida cattle rancher himself.

Josh March also comes from a farming family — his father owns a small herd of cattle in Scotland. But he says that small-hold ranchers like his father don’t have much to fear from cultivated meat, at least for the foreseeable future. “Cultivated meat is still very early on in its development, and it will take many years to scale up production,” he said, noting demand for meat was increasing all over the world, even as supply decreased in certain places. Specifically, he pointed to the American Midwest, where a drought last year wreaked havoc on the local beef industry, and argued companies like his functioned to augment, rather than replace, the beef industry.

But given the US national cattle herd has dwindled to its lowest point since 1951 — something that happened without any cultivated beef products on the shelves — it seems the Cattleman’s Association has bigger, more immediate problems than midwestern droughts and as-yet largely hypothetical lab grown beef alternatives. For example: a decline in America’s preference for beef, a spike in production costs, and increased global competition. Still, it’s not hard to imagine the Association might find the thought of further competition threatening, nor is it hard to imagine why they’d rather argue on account of safety.

“We just want to make sure that a product is safe,” Representative Black insisted when I spoke with him. “We shouldn’t be in a rush to fundamentally alter the human diet without first knowing the ramifications of it. Look, the truth is, the field of research of human nutrition is an ongoing field, we are still discovering things now, so there is no need to rush this to market.”

I pointed out that the FDA has already approved two different cultivated meat products, and asked who, if not the FDA, should determine whether or not cultivated meat products were safe. I didn’t get a clear answer.

“We are in uncharted territory,” Black said. “We’re taking natural food that humans evolved to eat and we’re trying to manufacture it ourselves from chemicals. We don’t know what’s gonna get left out. This is uncharted territory. Our institutions are not ready for this. They’re not prepared for it. As research and development continues to go on, one would expect that our institutions would evolve along with it.”

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At another point in the interview, Black pointed out that the “FDA has made mistakes before.”

The question of whether or not our regulatory institutions are “ready” for cultivated meat is an interesting one. There’s no federal law or final regulation that specifically addresses cultivated meat, and the current regulatory process itself is operating in a novel, ad-hoc fashion. For example, the regulation of beef and chicken (the two proteins the cultivated meat industry is most interested in) is normally carried out solely under the auspices of the United States Department of Agriculture (USDA). However, cultivated meat is currently being regulated primarily by the FDA, with the USDA only coming in at the harvesting process to ensure proper labeling and sanitation requirements are met. March, whose company is currently working its way through the FDA approval process, explained the process like this:

You have to go through this FDA consultation to make sure that they’re comfortable with the cell lines used in the process and any chemicals you’re using through the process. Once they’ve done the full review they’ll issue a letter [which allows the USDA to begin its approval process].

But with no legislation or concrete federal regulation governing cultivated meat, on what basis is the FDA making its decision? What do companies have to do to prove that their products are safe and effective? March told me that the two previous approvals (for GOOD Meat and UPSIDE Foods, respectively) serve as something of a road map, but that the FDA has noted that the two previous cases are not meant to serve as final guidance or final rules.

“As they learn more and get more information, they change their mind. So it can be a bit of a moving target,” March said. “The FDA are definitely cautious and conservative in their approach.”

On the one hand, the idea of food regulation standards being a “moving target” isn’t exactly reassuring, but setting regulations in stone with a nascent technology also seems unwise. One could take the FDA’s “moving target” as evidence that “our institutions are not prepared” for cultivated meat, to use Representative Black’s words, or, to use his words again, evidence that “our institutions are evolving along with” cultivated meat. Either the FDA is doing exactly what Florida legislators want it to do, or it’s not prepared to do anything at all. Instead of deciding which it is, the Florida legislature rendered the question moot.

At the heart of the (purported) issue is the immortalized cells used to create cultivated meat.

“Until we have long-term studies that tell me what lab-grown-immortalized cells do to your body, I challenge you to put it in your child,” said Florida State Representative Danny Alvarez, a co-sponsor of the bill banning cultivated meat.

March told me that the immortalized animal cells used in meat cultivation “are very picky,” and that getting them to grow in a bioreactor under very precise conditions is a struggle. More to the point, whenever the cells are removed from the bioreactor, they die, and will not grow no matter how immortal they are. “Once they are cooked and dissolved by your stomach, they are just a collection of amino acids and DNA, same as if you ate any other cell.”

The safety of immortal cells in cultivated meat is what Bloomberg, in its reporting, called an “informal scientific consensus.” But as proponents of the Florida ban pointed out, there are no long-term studies, and the fact that “immortal cells” are definitionally pre-cancerous, and sometimes fully cancerous, certainly doesn’t make for good PR.

With every company’s immortal cell line unique, lab-made, and patented, cultivated meat struck me as somewhat akin to GMOs. Despite similarities, however, their political reception has been quite different.

For most of my life, opposition to GMOs has been a liberal issue, while the opposition to cultivated meat — at least in Florida — is being led by Republicans. In part, this might be a sign of the times, health-nuttery is more right-coded than it used to be, particularly online, and particularly after COVID, as is distrust of the FDA. But never mind all that. When it comes to the culture wars, cultivated meat’s biggest problem is that it assuages liberal neuroses in ways that annoy conservatives at best, and make them paranoid at worst.

Liberals in the Washington Post openly yearning for a “guilt-free meat” future are suggesting, not so subtly, that eating meat in the present is immoral. From there, people imagine that sanctimonious libtards might one day force them to eat the “guilt-free meat” — in the pod with a side of bugs — as the slaughterhouses are shut down and turned into bike lanes for illegal-immigrant drag queens commuting to work at children’s libraries filled with neo-Marxist gay pornography (or whatever).

Josh March admitted that vegan sanctimony had been unhelpful to the industry.

“The plant-based meat industry didn’t do itself, or the cultivated meat industry, any favors by being so aggressively anti-meat,” the cultivated meat CEO told me. “There’s a lot of middle-Americans, and Americans in general, who don’t want to be told by vegans in California to stop eating meat. Ultimately, I think a lot of that anti-meat rhetoric that came with the first wave of meat alternatives has kind of backfired, and made meat and alternatives part of the culture war.”

Perhaps even more contentious than cultivated meat’s “anti-meat” perception (deserved or not), is its place in the fight over climate change. Whether or not cultivated meat is less carbon intensive than traditional meat is contingent on several factors, such as the type of energy being used to power the facility and the type of meat being replaced. One study even suggested that cultivated meat might be 25 times worse for the climate. (Still, companies like Sci-Fi Foods claim that their products are more sustainable than traditionally cultivated meat using studies they’ve personally commissioned.) This, along with headlines warning about the pernicious effects of agriculture on global warming — fear-mongering about cow farts, for example — has given people the impression that liberals want to save the world from Al Gore’s PowerPoints by taking away their hamburgers. Governor DeSantis seemed to channel this line of thinking while throwing his support behind the cultivated meat ban.

“They really want to go after agriculture,” he said, during a speech attacking ESG (environmental social, and corporate governance), a set of standards companies can adhere to if they wish to market themselves to “socially conscious investors.” “They want to blame agriculture for global warming.”

ESG is a moral laundering scheme for socially liberal neurotics with too much money and a shallow one at that. Marathon Petroleum is an “ESG” company, for Christ's sake. The fact that ESG is a goofy marketing racket rather than the burger-snatching New World Order it's cracked up to be doesn’t matter. Perception does, and the perception is that cultivated meat is part of an effort to replace traditional meat with frankenfood at the behest of godless, sanctimonious elites who obsess over climate change because they, unlike regular Americans, don’t have any real problems. In my opinion, this was the real driving force behind Florida’s meat ban, with the health concerns serving as a good talking point, and the beef lobby’s political patronage merely serving as icing on a cake everyone already wanted to bake.

March told me he thought the FDA was the best arbiter of safety and that consumers should be the ones to ultimately decide whether or not they want to eat cultivated meat — not their state government. It's at least a clear answer, which is more than I received from proponents of the Florida ban. To this day, lawmakers opposed to cultivated meat can’t decide who should make the call on safety, when there might be “enough” research, or why, given the wide array of “unnatural” food products lining Publix shelves today, individual Floridians shouldn’t be able to decide for themselves whether or not they want to eat the product. As a Floridian who wrote this article with a cigarette in his mouth, I don’t want my state government prohibiting products where the detrimental health effects are certain, much less theoretical. Repeal the ban.

– River Page

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