To some, eating a burger that was actually manufactured in a lab may sound like a chilling nightmare from Aldous Huxley's Brave New World, but to others, the discovery that in vitro meat may be coming soon to our supermarkets is a cause for celebration. Having recently traveled to laboratories in the Netherlands and North Carolina to observe the progress of tissue scientists in their titanic endeavor, science writer Michael Specter eagerly argues in favor of test-tube meat. Scientists retrieve stem cells from pigs and place them in petri dishes of nutrient-rich broth, and these cells rapidly divide and grow to become meat cells.
Specter explains that animal welfare is a huge part of the motivation for growing meat in labs. "Billions of cows, chickens and pigs would no longer
spend their lives force-fed grain and antibiotics or cooped up in
factory farms." In vitro meat would also benefit the planet immensely by reducing the amount of global livestock needed, which, "according to the Food and Agricultural Organization of the United
Nations, is responsible for nearly 20 percent of all
greenhouse-gas emissions. And as the population grows, more
resources will be needed to sustain the agricultural industry."
With promising studies such as test tube meat, Thomas Malthus may finally stop churning in his grave.
Read more at http://www.npr.org/2011/08/30/139786731/tube-burgers-the-world-of-in-vitro-meat.
Showing posts with label ethics. Show all posts
Showing posts with label ethics. Show all posts
Monday, September 12, 2011
Tuesday, November 18, 2008
Fair Trade and the Global Food Economy
a panel discussion on Tuesday, November 11th at 7:30pm in the Library Athenaeum.Should our global market be based on free trade or fair trade principles? Are fair trade products the more ethical products? How is our current economy affecting the fair trade market?
- Lee Wallace, Director of Peace Coffee, a company founded as a project to prove fair trade is a viable business model
- Reginaldo Haslett-Marroquin, co-founder of Peace Coffee, and currently executive director of the Latino Enterprise Center
- Erik Esse, Director of the Minneapolis-based Local Fair Trade Network
- Mike Hemesath, Chair of the Carleton economics department, professor of international trade and health economics, and director of the Ethical Inquiry at Carleton (EthIC) program
Fair Trade snacks provided. Sponsored by Food Truth & EthIC
Carleton College News Press Release
Northfield.org Press Release
Labels:
ethics,
fair trade,
food economy,
free trade,
global,
panel,
peace coffee
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