A happy middle ground: New Harvest?
The most endearing part of Joe’s article was X or Y question he posed to Josh Tetrick, CEO of JUST, about how where the $3B that investors put into cultured meat should have been spent:“Mr. Tetrick perched his hands on his knees to represent two runners. The runner on the right, he said, represented grass-roots activism, political advocacy, nutritional education, farm policy, fair labor practices, animal conservation. The runner on the left was cultivated meat. If he had $3 billion, he mused, which would be the better bet to bring about the kind of world he says he wants first?
He chose the first runner.”
Shouldn’t we dare to find a middle ground, that breaks the mold of tech vs. activism as a way to usher in disruptive change?What about what New Harvest does - a non-profit approach to advancing cultured meat that keeps the mission of the technology central? And shouldn’t we envision a world where both runners win - where grassroots activism and cultured meat coexist, and even better, enable one another in achieving a shared mission?“…The thing is, he said, you’re less likely to find people to give the first runner $3 billion. Even if it’s a better strategy, that’s not how the world works.
“People are a lot more motivated to invest in something where they can get a return in something than they are to donate something,” he said. “I think that’s unfortunate, but I think that’s the reality of it.”
That, I can certainly say, is true.
New Harvest has received a fraction of a fraction of a fraction of the investment seen in cultured meat. But our influence remains outsized thanks to a commitment to advancing technology towards a mission, not towards near-term profitability for a single private entity. With a focus on collaboration, concerted efforts, and creating open, lasting change - a lot can be done with a little. (But much more could be done with some real cash!).As Clair Purcell, COO of Alcheme Bio says in her reaction to the NYT piece, “sometimes, maybe even in VC land, slow and steady wins the race.” It’s only slow because we’re used to VC being fast. But maybe cultured meat just isn’t fast. And standard approaches to VC just might not be the vehicle that moves the needle in this era of cultured meat’s development. |