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Inside an insect farm: Are mealworms a sustainable meat alternative?

The French biotech company ŸԲ𳦳 plans to open 15 mealworm factories by 2030. We looked inside their pilot plant to see what the future of food might look like
Alex Wilkins inside Ynsect's research and development lab in Evry, Paris, France
Alex Wilkins inside ŸԲ𳦳’s research and development lab in Evry, France
David Stock

It is winter in the French town of Dole, but inside the factory where I am standing, the temperature is above 25°C (80°F) and the humid air has a distinctive earthy odour. Robot arms and automated conveyor belts transport stacks of red trays in every direction. The trays are filled with the factory’s raw material: billions of Tenebrio molitor beetle larvae, commonly known as mealworms.

This automated mealworm nursery and slaughterhouse is the blueprint for a global network of insect farms planned by French biotech company ŸԲ𳦳. Its products so far have been chemical fertilisers for plants, pet food and farm feeds for pigs and chickens. But in 2021 and the company expects this market to grow rapidly in the coming years. If all goes according to schedule, it will open 15 such factories by 2030, including the world’s largest insect farm in Amiens, France.

The ruinous environmental impact of the global meat industry, which uses nearly 40 per cent of all habitable land on Earth and makes up 14 per cent of human-made greenhouse gas emissions, has led to a growing drive to find alternative sources of protein. For example, in December 2022, public funding bodies in the UK announced a

Many are convinced that insects will be a large part of the solution. “Insect protein is just going to grow in terms of the acceptance of it and how many people eat it – the market will grow and develop,” says Olivia Champion at Entec Nutrition, an insect-based animal feed company in the UK.

ŸԲ𳦳’s dried mealworms are more than 50 per cent protein and rich in fibre and fats. They can be turned into a suite of food products, from protein powders mixed into burgers, protein
shakes and cereal bars to cooking oils. This can be done at a fraction of the environmental cost of traditional farming: ŸԲ𳦳 says for 1 kilogram of protein, it uses 98 per cent less land and emits 40 times less carbon than beef, and uses 40 times less water than pork.

The mealworms in the Dole factory are fed on by-products from wheat processing. There is an assumption that all insect alternatives are more environmentally friendly than crops like soya, but this isn’t a given. Some insect-food companies use carbon-intensive materials as feed, which can increase their carbon footprint, says Champion, making the environmental benefits dependent on a particular factory’s set-up.

Unlike the livestock industry, where rearing is typically separate to slaughter, at Dole the entire operation is under one roof. “We are in full control of the chain of production,” says Benjamin Armenjon, ŸԲ𳦳’s general manager. “That gives us strength in terms of quality, security and safety.”

Meanwhile, at ŸԲ𳦳’s headquarters and research labs in Paris, the firm is experimenting with optimal rearing conditions for the mealworms, such as food, temperature and humidity. Researchers are also analysing the nutritional content of its products and the food potential of other insects, including the lesser mealworm Alphitobius diaperinus.

ŸԲ𳦳's mealworm pilot factory in Dole, France
ŸԲ𳦳’s mealworm pilot factory in Dole, France
ŸԲ𳦳

The pilot plant in Dole, with its 24-hour mechanised operation, is impressive, but it is small compared with the Amiens factory ŸԲ𳦳 is preparing to open later this year, which will produce 200,000 tonnes of insect-based products a year. With this automated, scaled-up facility, ŸԲ𳦳 hopes to bring the cost of its products down enough to compete with soya.

Whether companies like ŸԲ𳦳 and Entec Nutrition are successful at replacing meat in human diets will depend in large part on the form in which people consume the insect-based food, says Champion. A burger with insect protein in it is likely to be more palatable to consumers than fried whole mealworms, for instance. While the idea of eating insects is often met with revulsion by consumers in the West, ŸԲ𳦳 hopes that with enough education, cultural attitudes will shift over time.

Armenjon doesn’t see a future in which the only option is insects, but rather one in which its products are part of an alternative meat ecosystem, with some people eating lab-grown meat and some sticking to plant-based alternatives, but he hopes some will choose insect-based foods.

“There are vegan people, flexitarians, vegetarians, meat lovers – this is fine, we don’t want to change people,” he says.

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Topics: farming / Insects