Cultured fruit: growing fruit without plants.
van der Zee LD, Peeters NR, Proveniers MCG, Jinkerson RE, Robaey ZH
Food Systems
Fruit you eat could one day grow in a facility instead of a field, meaning drought, frost, and soil loss stop being reasons your local farmer's market goes bare.
Researchers think we can grow actual fruit — not a substitute, but real fruit tissue — in a controlled setting, much like how plant cuttings are multiplied in nurseries today. The trick is feeding that growing fruit with sugars that don't come from farmland, so we're not just shifting the environmental burden. If it works at scale, fruit production could become far less dependent on weather, land, and water.
Key Findings
Fruit can theoretically be cultivated without growing an entire plant, using tissue-culture methods adapted from the commercial micropropagation industry.
Sustainability gains are only realized if the sugar used to fuel fruit growth comes from non-agricultural sources, not crops that already strain land and water.
The authors flag equitable access as a critical challenge, warning that industrialization of this technology could concentrate power and deepen food-system inequality.
chevron_right Technical Summary
Scientists are proposing a method to grow fruit tissue in controlled environments without ever planting or harvesting a whole plant — essentially culturing fruit the way we culture cells in a lab. If powered by non-crop sugar sources, this approach could sharply reduce agriculture's environmental footprint and make food production more resilient to climate change.
Abstract Preview
Dominant forms of agriculture burden our environment, and food production is threatened by climate change. In this opinion article we introduce a paradigm shift in food production by describing a m...
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