4 days ago
550: [Part 2] Getting Cats Vegan is Possible and Imperative by Karthik Sekar at AfterMeatBook.com
Getting Cats Vegan is Possible and Imperative. Part 2 of 2. By Dr. Karthik Sekar at AfterMeatBook.com.
Original Post: https://forum.effectivealtruism.org/posts/AFPXXepkgitbvTtpH/getting-cats-vegan-is-possible-and-imperative
Related Episodes:
193: Cultured Meat for Pet Food: Game Changer!
200: [Part 1] Vegan Cats 101: Nutrients, Not Ingredients is What Really Matters
201: [Part 2] Vegan Cats 101: Nutrients, Not Ingredients, Is What Really Matters
211: Cultured Meat: The Future of Pet Food
233: Should Cats & Dogs Eat Cows & Chickens?
318: Bravo Packing: The Dirty Business of Pet Food Slaughterhouses
325: The Secret Horrors and Products of Rendering Dead Animals
337: Avoid Toxins from Bioaccumulation with Vegan Cat & Dog Food
349: 5 Ways to Explain Why My Cat/Dog is Now Vegan
Karthik’s Interviews on other Podcasts:
Vegan Family Kitchen
Hope for the Animals
Karthik Sekar, Ph.D is the author of After Meat: The Case for an Amazing Meat-Free World.
He is a trained scientist and engineer. He finished his B.S. in Biomedical Engineering from the University of North Carolina, his PhD in Chemical Engineering from Northwestern University, and a postdoctoral position in Systems Biology at ETH Zurich. He currently works on the front lines of the alternative food industry in the San Francisco Bay Area. Please visit www.aftermeatbook.com to learn more.
“The movement away from animal-based foods is already proceeding with tremendous momentum,” says Karthik Sekar, Ph.D. and author of AFTER MEAT (November 16, 2021). According to Dr. Sekar, Burger King and McDonalds have both introduced veggie burgers sourced from well-known, next-generation vegan food companies, Beyond Meat and Impossible Foods, and the publication, The Economist, declared 2019 to be the “Year of the Vegan”.
AFTER MEAT explores the technological reasons for moving away from animal products. “Animals are awful technology,” says Dr. Sekar, who supports his opinion by examining how inefficient it is to use cows, for example, to produce steaks, leather, and milk. According to Dr. Sekar, it takes more than a year to grow food to feed animals, and we “waste” more than ninety percent of what we feed the animal to reach the desired result, due to the fundamental physics of cow biology. These are irretrievably terrible metrics. We can do much better with alternative technology such as microbial fermentation, which will also be easier to innovate for taste, nutrition, and other qualities we care about. And all indications are that the future of food will ultimately be tastier, healthier, cheaper, kinder, and better for the environment. This will happen because we won’t use animal products.
100% of the proceeds of AFTER MEAT will be donated to the following charities: The Good Food Institute; Animal Charity Evaluator’s Recommended Charity Fund; Effective Altruism’s Animal Welfare Fund; and Faunalytics.
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