Image Credit: Green Queen
Every week we track the business, tech and investment trends in CPG, retail, restaurants, agriculture, cooking and health, so you don’t have to. Here are some of this week’s top headlines.
Lawmakers across various states are increasingly pushing to ban cultivated meat, citing concerns about its impact on traditional livestock farming. This move, primarily championed by right-wing legislators from states like Arizona to Florida, seeks to restrict the sale of protein cultivated from animal cells. Meanwhile, Marc Lore’s food delivery startup Wonder secures a $700 million investment, with plans to open 100 delivery-focused restaurants in NYC area.
In other news, we’ve wrapped the first season of our podcast in partnership with AgFunder: New Food Order, a nuanced investigation into the business of tackling our climate and social crises through food and agriculture. Read all about why we launched the podcast, and be sure to subscribe and share!
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Restricting the sale of protein cultured from animal cells, developed as a way to raise meat without the climate impacts of livestock, has become a trendy right-wing legislative focus in states from Arizona to Florida.
The former Walmart executive plans to open nearly 100 delivery-focused restaurant locations around the New York City area over the next two years.
Dutch cultivated meat leader Meatable has cut the production time for its cultivated meat by half, making its hybrid sausages much cheaper to produce.
A report found that large firms pressured suppliers to favor them over competitors. It also concluded that some retailers “seem to have used rising costs as an opportunity to further hike prices.”
Authorities say Kroger’s planned Albertsons takeover will leave fewer traditional supermarkets to compete for Americans’ grocery dollars.
The Department of Energy funding will help the Ben & Jerry’s manufacturer on a project designed to cut 14k metric tons of emissions annually.
An investigation into the sugar cane industry in the Indian state of Maharashtra found workers ensnared by debt and pushed into child marriages and unnecessary hysterectomies.
The new obesity drugs might be an exception to a chronic, deadly problem: the failure to stick with medication.