Timeline of cellular agriculture

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This page is a timeline of major events in the history of cellular agriculture. Cellular agriculture refers to the development of agricultural products - especially animal products - from cell cultures rather than the bodies of living organisms. This includes in vitro or cultured meat, as well as cultured dairy, eggs, leather, gelatin, and silk. In recent years a number of cellular animal agriculture companies and non-profits have emerged due to technological advances and increasing concern over the animal welfare and rights, environmental, and public health problems associated with conventional animal agriculture.[1]

Timeline

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YearEvent
1912French biologist Alexis Carrel keeps a piece of chick heart muscle alive in a Petri dish, demonstrating the possibility of keeping muscle tissue alive outside of the body.[2]
1930Frederick Edwin Smith, 1st Earl of Birkenhead predicts that "It will no longer be necessary to go to the extravagant length of rearing a bullock in order to eat its steak. From one 'parent' steak of choice tenderness it will be possible to grow as large and as juicy a steak as can be desired."[3]
1932Winston Churchill writes "Fifty years hence we shall escape the absurdity of growing a whole chicken in order to eat the breast or wing by growing these parts separately under a suitable medium."[3]
Early 1950sWillem van Eelen recognizes the possibility of generating meat from tissue culture.[2]
1971Russell Ross achieves the in vitro cultivation of muscular fibers.[4]
1995The U.S. Food and Drug Administration approves the use of commercial in-vitro meat production.[5]
1999Willem van Eelen secures the first patent for cultured meat.[2]
2001NASA begins in vitro meat experiments, producing cultured turkey meat.[6][7]
2002Researchers culture muscle tissue of the common goldfish in Petri dishes. The meat was judged by a test-panel to be acceptable as food.[2]
2003Oron Catts and Ionat Zurr of the Tissue Culture and Art Project and Harvard Medical School produce an edible steak from frog stem cells.[8]
2004Jason Matheny founds New Harvest, the first non-profit to work for the development of cultured meat.[3]
2005Dutch government agency SenterNovem begins funding cultured meat research.[9]
2005The first peer-reviewed journal article on lab-grown meat appears in Tissue Engineering.[10]
2008The In Vitro Meat Consortium holds the first international conference on the production of in vitro meat.[11]
2008People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals offers a $1 million prize to the first group to make a commercially viable lab-grown chicken by 2012.[5]
2011The company Modern Meadow, aimed at producing cultured leather and meat, is founded.[12]
2013The first cultured hamburger, developed by Dutch researcher Mark Post's lab, is taste-tested by Hanni Rützler.[13]
2014Muufri and The EVERY Company, companies aimed at producing cultured dairy and eggs, respectively, are founded with the assistance of New Harvest.[14][15]
2014Real Vegan Cheese, a startup aimed at creating cultured cheese, is founded.[16]
2014Modern Meadow presents "steak chips", discs of lab-grown meat that could be produced at relatively low cost.[12]
2015The Modern Agriculture Foundation, which focuses on developing cultured chicken meat (as chickens make up the large majority of land animals killed for food[17]), is founded in Israel.[18]
2015According to Mark Post's lab, the cost of producing a cultured hamburger patty drops from $325,000 in 2013 to less than $12.[19]
2016New Crop Capital, a private venture capital fund investing in alternatives to animal agriculture - including cellular agriculture - is founded. Its $25 million portfolio includes cultured meat company Memphis Meats and cultured collagen company Gelzen, along with Lighter, a software platform designed to facilitate plant-based eating, a plant-based meal delivery service called Purple Carrot, a dairy alternative Lyrical Foods, the New Zealand plant-based meat company Sunfed, and alternative cheese company Miyoko’s Kitchen.[20]
2016The Good Food Institute, an organization devoted to promoting alternatives to animal food products - including cellular agriculture - is founded.[21]
2016Memphis Meats announces the creation of the first cultured meatball.[22]
2016New Harvest hosted New Harvest 2016: Experience Cellular Agriculture, the first-ever global cellular agriculture conference.[23]
2018Paul Shapiro's book Clean Meat: How Growing Meat Without Animals Will Revolutionize Dinner and the World, which chronicles the entrepreneurs, scientists and investors seeking to create the world's first slaughter-free meat.[24] The book was placed on The Washington Post's bestseller list.[25]
2019 Perfect Day (formerly Muufri) sells 1000 3-pint bundles of ice cream made with non-animal whey protein.[26]
2020Memphis Meats received a US$161 million investment in its Series B, which is more than everything that had been invested in the industry so far which was US$155 million.[27]
2021 Tufts University is awarded US$10 million by the USDA to establish the National Institute for Cellular Agriculture.[28]
2024 Senara GmbH, with CEO Dr. Svenja Dannewitz Prosseda, presents the first-ever picture of a cell-cultivated milk at Slush in Helsinki and on their LinkedIn profile
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