Skip to main content
eScholarship
Open Access Publications from the University of California

UC Davis

UC Davis Electronic Theses and Dissertations bannerUC Davis

Techno-Economic Analysis of Large-Scale Cultivated Meat Production

No data is associated with this publication.
Abstract

Increases in global meat demands cannot be sustainably met with current methods of livestock farming, which has a substantial impact on greenhouse gas emissions, land use, and water consumption. Cultivated meat is a rapidly advancing technology that produces meat products by proliferating and differentiating animal stem cells in large bioreactors, avoiding conventional live-animal farming. While many companies are working in this area, there is a lack of existing infrastructure and experience at commercial scale, resulting in many technical bottlenecks such as scale-up of cell fermentation and media availability and costs. In this study, we evaluate theoretical cultivated beef production facilities with the goal of envisioning an industry with multiple facilities to produce in total 100,000,000 kg fresh weight (FW) of unstructured cultured beef per year or ~0.14% of the annual global beef production. Using the computer-aided process design software, SuperPro Designer®, facilities are modelled to create a comprehensive techno-economic analysis (TEA) to highlight improvements that can lower the cost of such a production system and allow cultivated meat products to be competitive. Three facility scenarios are presented with different sized production reactors; 42,000 L total volume stirred tank bioreactor (STR) with a base case cost of goods sold (COGS) of $31.5/kg, 210,000 L total volume STR with a COGS of $21.9/kg, and 260,000 L total volume airlift reactor (ALR) with a COGS of $14.0/kg. The SuperPro models that correspond to these three production reactor sizes are titled “40K STR 8-13-22”, “210K STR 8-13-22”, and “260K ALR 8-13-22”. This study outlines how advances in scaled up bioreactors and decreased media costs are necessary for commercialization of cultured beef products.

Main Content

This item is under embargo until March 15, 2025.