Litcius/Paper detail

The barriers and drivers of a safe market introduction of cultured meat: A qualitative study

Linsay Ketelings, Stef Kremers, Alie de Boer

2021Food Control54 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Cultured meat – animal meat produced with the help of tissue engineering techniques – is proposed as a solution to the adverse effects of the meat producing industry and its environmental impact. Only limited research has briefly touched upon safety and regulatory aspects of cultured meat. Scientific evidence demonstrating that a food does not pose a safety risk to human health is essential according to European legislation. Therefore, the present study aims to establish what the barriers and drivers are of a safe market introduction of cultured meat. A qualitative, exploratory approach is used with semi-structured in-depth interviews in three groups of stakeholders: regulatory experts, scientific experts and industrial representatives (total N = 15). Certain areas of cultured meat research require more attention from researchers to ensure the highest level of safety. Overall, the lack of in-depth research related to hazard and risk characterisation of cultured meat is considered the biggest barrier in introducing a safe product to the market. We call for changing the research emphasis towards a safety-oriented approach to ensure the highest level of safety possible.

Topics & Concepts

Food safetyBusinessExploratory researchLegislationMeat packing industryHazardQualitative researchProduct (mathematics)Safety cultureRisk analysis (engineering)MarketingEnvironmental healthBiotechnologyFood scienceMedicinePolitical scienceEconomicsBiologyEcologySociologyGeometryLawAnthropologyManagementMathematicsSocial scienceAgriculture Sustainability and Environmental ImpactFood Waste Reduction and Sustainability