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SA food tech startup Mogale Meat debuts cultivated chicken breast

Mogale Meat’s cultivated chicken breast is the first prototype showcased by the South African cellular food-tech company. Photo: Supplied/Ventureburn
Mogale Meat’s cultivated chicken breast is the first prototype showcased by the South African cellular food-tech company. Photo: Supplied/Ventureburn

Mogale Meat, a South African cellular food-tech company, has debuted Africa’s first cultivated chicken.

According to the company, the launch signals the birth of a major new technological drive to produce more essential animal protein for people, and the startup states that cultivated meat is a “potential game-changer” for the planet, and more specifically for Africa’s biodiversity and wildlife conservation.

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Mogale Meat’s cultivated chicken breast, composed of real chicken muscle and fat cells blended with a mushroom matrix, is the first prototype the startup is showcasing. A signature wildlife meat product will be revealed later this year.

“With the expanding population in Africa, which is expected to double in the next 30 years, we are rapidly outstripping our ability to supply affordable and nutritious food. Cultivated meat has the promise to address food security and add nutritional value without further high-impact agricultural practices that are having devastating effects on Africa’s biodiversity and wildlife,” says Mogale Meat.

It adds, “In recent years we have seen the food industry pivot towards alternative meat and sustainable sources of protein, with plant-based meat-like products, and now cultivated meat coming onto the scene.

“Globally there are already over 100 startup companies working in the cultivated meat space with billions of dollars being invested. It is thrilling that South Africa is among those 100 companies and has achieved such a significant milestone of showcasing Africa’s first cultivated chicken.”

uth African startup Mogale Meat is building out its BioBank of antelope and cattle cells to grow healthy, sustainable meat for the region. Photo: Supplied/Ventureburn

MeatOurFuture project

Over the past 18 months, the startup has been using cutting-edge scientific research and innovation to produce cultivated meat from free-roaming livestock and wildlife such as cattle and antelope. Although Mogale Meat’s focus is on being a cultivated game meat company, it has in just eight months produced Africa’s first chicken breast prototype using cultivated meat technology to compete in the global $15 million XPrize Feed the Next Billion competition.

Mogale Meat Co, the managing partner of the MeatOurFuture project, in collaboration with Biotechnology and Food Science, Tshwane University of Technology and the School of Life Sciences, University of KwaZulu-Natal is the only semi-finalist team, of 31 teams, from the continent of Africa for this prestigious competition.

Each team was given a choice between chicken or fish, and MeatOurFuture decided on chicken, as this is not only the most popular meat in Africa but the most widely eaten meat worldwide.

Mogale Meat states that its vision is to make healthy and nutritious cell-based meat accessible to all in Africa. The team is currently working on prototyping a unique modular plug-and-play concept production plant that will allow cultivated meat to be made where the people are.

“This will not only provide the people across the continent of Africa with affordable and nutritional animal protein but do so in a way that conserves Africa’s precious wildlife and biodiversity,” the startup says.

Challenges to overcome

The biggest challenge Mogale Meat and other cultivated meat companies are currently facing is firstly bringing down the cost to manufacture the meat at scale, and secondly paving the way for regulatory approval.

Although cultivated meat is real meat, it does require policies surrounding food safety, production, as well as trade to be updated to include cell-cultured meat that is produced without the conventional way of slaughtering live animals.

Cultivated meat is produced by taking a small biopsy from a living animal and growing the cells in a bioreactor, much the same way that the cells would grow in an animal, but more efficiently and without the addition of unwanted growth hormones, antibiotics, and other chemical compounds.

“Producing meat through cell technology also means reducing the environmental impact of raising more livestock to keep up with human consumption demands. Less land has to be ploughed to feed animals in feedlots, less water is required and most importantly wildlife and the incredible biodiversity we have in Africa can be conserved by transitioning to cultured meat production,” Mogale Meat says.

Dr Paul Bartels, a wildlife veterinarian and the founder and CEO of Mogale Meat. Photo: Supplied/Ventureburn

Conserving Africa’s wildlife heritage

Dr Paul Bartels a wildlife veterinarian and the founder and chief executive of Mogale Meat says, “Mogale Meat Co is raising the bar by developing BestByNature food technology that will not only impact the way people view and eat healthy game meat, but also do so by supporting the economic and social well-being of the wildlife industry, national parks and the communities living with wildlife.”

Mogale Meat aims to conserve Africa’s wildlife heritage through the provision of sustainable animal protein for the people of Africa and the world through cultivated game meat created from the cells of free-roaming antelope and cattle.

READ MORE: Africa’s innovators turn to tech to tackle transport woes

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