All pork, no pig.
Big Picture
Although pork has nearly half the carbon footprint per pound as beef, we eat twice as much of it. Pork is now the world’s most popular meat, accounting for 35% of global consumption. And it’s growing, driven up by Chinese demand, which accounts for roughly half of all pork sales. Industrial pork production is also tied to infectious diseases like Swine Fever that killed nearly 40% of China’s pig population in 2019.
How it Works
Uncommon produces non-genetically modified bacon and pork belly from cultured cells without losing the taste or texture of meat from animals. Using a novel approach involving induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSCs), they can efficiently convert minimally-invasive blood samples into full-fledged muscle, fat, and skin tissues without needing to genetically modify any cell DNA.
Unfair Advantage
The novelty of their approach is to succeed in using iPSCs without genetic modification. It allows for more efficient cell differentiation, or the process of turning stem cells into muscle, fat, and skin tissue. This points toward a more scalable path to meat production while preserving a quicker path to regulatory and consumer acceptance in key geographies, particularly in the UK and European Union.
80
% less CO2e
per pound of pork

BENJAMINA BOLLAG CEO & FOUNDER
Benjamina previously co-founded a B2B electronics company. She holds a Master’s of Chemical Engineering from Imperial College London.

RUTH FARAM HEAD OF R&D
Dr. Faram has over 15 years of experience working with stem cells and post doctoral at Oxford focused on induced pluripotent stem cells and epigenetics.
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