Sawdust for starters: Could turning industrial waste into meat alternatives solve food scarcity?

By Joshua Askew
Published on 17/09/2023

Would you eat industrial byproducts? One food tech company from Estonia certainly hopes so.


Capture.JPG

Think about sawdust.

Eating it is probably the last thing that comes into your mind, but that may be about to change thanks to one Estonian start-up.

ÄIO, set up in 2022, has created a way of producing fats and oils from industrial waste.


"What we have developed is very similar to brewing beer, where yeast is used to convert sugars from barley into alcohol, and hops are added for taste," co-founder Petri-Jaan Lahtvee told Euronews Next, explaining how it works in the simplest terms.

"We are using a different type of yeast that coverts sugars from industrial sidestreams, but not into ethanol - into fats and oils instead," he added.

"It's basically a very natural process like fermentation".
Timber, agricultural byproducts like straw, and even food waste, can be turned into ingredients for the food or cosmetic industries.

Plus the process doesn't need other inputs - save a "little bit" of nitrogen - and is easily scalable in other locations around the world, according to Lahtvee.


The rosey red oil produced by ÄIO's innovative process is ideal for making alternatives to meat, which often need a splash of colour to attract consumers away from their animal-based rivals.

Capture2.JPG

The company says its encapsulated oils are a "perfect" plant-based substitute for bakery products.

Besides being "tastier and healthier" than alternatives on the market, a key benefit of their invention is it "mitigates" the "huge environmental impact" of animal fats and plant-based oils, Lahtvee told Euronews Next.

Producing palm oil - which is used in a myriad of everyday products like spreads and shampoo - has caused devastating deforestation across Asia, Africa, and Latin America, according to the World Wildlife Fund.

'Upcycling' household waste​


But there are other boons.

Lahtvee claims their process can improve food security when local inputs are used, citing how the COVID-19 pandemic and Ukraine war disrupted global supply chains.

Looking to the future, the Estonian scientist-come-entrepreneur says ÄIO is working on technologies to "upcycle" household food waste, such as banana and orange peel.

Capture3.JPG

Still, they face many hurdles.
When asked if ÄIO faces prejudice from consumers, who may be reluctant to eat industrial byproducts, Lahtvee insists the process is the same as making other fermented foods like kimchi or yoghurt that people eat without thinking twice.

Then there is the question of price.

To compete effectively in the market, ÄIO products need to be cheaper than alternatives, especially palm oil.

This is currently not the case, though industry experts argue that if the environmental cost of animal and plant-based products were taken into account, and government subsidies removed, then innovative replacements would be much more competitive.

ÄIO raised €1 million from investors at the start of 2023 to support its bid to revolutionise the food industry.

Capture4.JPG

"Bigger questions" surround legislation, for Lahtvee.
"Legal barriers are probably the trickiest to overcome, or let's say they contain the most uncertainty because technology-wise we have been able to scale up the process very nicely," he told Euronews Next.

"The biggest unknown for us today is the regulations, we all know and understand that the food has to be safe.

But the processes to apply for a normal food permit today are, how to say, not very understandable or predictable".

The EU has some of the strictest rules around food production in the world.

These help ensure edible products are not harmful to consumers or the environment.
However, some experts and industrial figures have argued EU laws hinder food innovation.
 
Ostatnio edytowane:
So we're going back to "sawdust in bread" sort of crap?

Eta: I think they mean sawdust that IS bread. Fuck me, that's even worse.
 
We don't have food scarcity. We're the fattest people ever to live. Hunger is a non-issue.
 
Plant oils are unfit for human consumption, I can't even imagine the levels of inflammation caused by distilled rotting industrial waste. That said plenty of people don't have any issue with consuming industrial waste, see the entire plant based "milk" industry.
 
Funny thing is that this isn't new idea, during WWII Himmler tried to create pate-like meat subsidies made from wooden waste, but they tasted so awful that even camp prisoners and dogs didn't want to eat it.
 
Would you eat industrial byproducts? One food tech company from Estonia certainly hopes so.
I will now list the things I know about Estonia, in order of me learning them.

#1. Is the country Brendan Frasier's character is allegedly from in the 1990's movie Encino Man.
#2. Is part of the Balkans and shares a border with Latvia and Russia, possibly one other country, but I don't fucking remember.
#3. Wants me to eat industrial waste, fuck you.
 
To compete effectively in the market, ÄIO products need to be cheaper than alternatives, especially palm oil.

This is currently not the case, though industry experts argue that if the environmental cost of animal and plant-based products were taken into account,
Translation it won't be cheaper for our lifetime if they have to bring up the environment. Thankfully avoiding a Soylent Green future for now as after industrial waste they would turn to other sources I bet.
 
I will now list the things I know about Estonia, in order of me learning them.

#1. Is the country Brendan Frasier's character is allegedly from in the 1990's movie Encino Man.
#2. Is part of the Balkans and shares a border with Latvia and Russia, possibly one other country, but I don't fucking remember.
#3. Wants me to eat industrial waste, fuck you.
Not Balkans, Baltics.
 
You'd think "food tech" would be more occupied with finding new ways for us to "eat."

Like say, a food patch you just use to absorb nutrients through your skin. Like some weirdass plant.
But no, their "tech" is to convince us to eat literal dirt and bugs. Very innovative. Much convinced. Lots funding.
 
Surely there are other, better uses for this kind of waste? In Sweden they have a really good range of cleaning products made from pine waste from the timber industry. They also have a red paint made from the iron ore waste from the mining.
I’m all for getting rid of palm oil and all for finding uses for waste streams, but making people eat it is dumb and smacks of humiliation
 
>Slaughter millions of cows to solve climate change
>Now meat is apparently scarce


How could this happen?!
 
That doesn't seem safe. Most "alternative" foods are still treated as food-grade the entire supply chain. Industrial waste can potentially be contaminated with virtually everything under the sun. Even assuming you have a reprocessing system that can remove every potential toxin and danger, that requires very controlled and exact procedures and processes that you will never see when making at large volumes.
 
Wstecz
Top Na dole