News
  • Login
  • Home
  • News
  • Sport
  • Worklife
  • Travel
  • Reel
  • Future
  • More
Saturday, July 4, 2026
No Result
View All Result

NEWS

3 °c
London
8 ° Wed
9 ° Thu
11 ° Fri
13 ° Sat
  • Home
  • Video
  • World
    • All
    • Africa
    • Asia
    • Australia
    • Europe
    • Latin America
    • Middle East
    • US & Canada

    Christian Brothers: Australian court pauses abuse victims’ payouts as group claims bankruptcy

    Taylor Swift and Travis Kelce’s relationship so far in key moments

    Kenya’s vanishing rural schools – and why a new curriculum may be to blame

    Pakistan: Overcrowded bus plunges into ravine, killing at least 32

    Tusk warns ‘critical months’ ahead for Poland in face of Russian threat

    Anguished families left to identify Venezuela quake victims at makeshift morgue

    Iran begins public mourning for Ayatollah killed in February

    Taylor Swift and Travis Kelce marry at Madison Square Garden

    Australia vs Ireland: Joe Schmidt not planning Leinster return and rules out another Test job

  • UK
    • All
    • England
    • N. Ireland
    • Politics
    • Scotland
    • Wales

    Newspaper headlines: Storm threat to England match and ‘bid to block Miliband’

    In pictures: Royal Week brings King and Queen to Scotland

    Scientist restoring Wales’ peatlands in climate change fight

    The Irish ancestry that helped shape US history

    Starmer: Burnham will have to spend as much time on foreign affairs as me

    World Cup 2026: England-Mexico kick-off unchanged after Fifa U-turn

    Lamb kebabs made of goat compared to horsemeat in lasagne scandal

    Kate Forbes: I was ‘slam dunk’ for SNP leadership until revealing gay marriage views

    Murci fashion side hustle from nan’s house turns into £10m business

  • Business
    • All
    • Companies
    • Connected World
    • Economy
    • Entrepreneurship
    • Global Trade
    • Technology of Business

    Security staff strikes averted at Aberdeen Airport

    ‘Start work at 11’ – but will other bosses be as flexible over England’s 1am match?

    World Cup boom falters as US hospitality jobs fall in June

    ‘We give up to £400 to a honeymoon fund’: How much should you gift at a wedding?

    World Cup dreams shattered as StubHub tickets cancelled at last minute

    USMCA: Why the expected fight over the North American trade deal never kicked off

    Diesel sees biggest monthly fall in 26 years. What’s happening to fuel prices?

    Up to 150 ex-WHSmith high street stores to close as rescue deal approved

    What is GDP and how fast is the UK economy growing?

  • Tech
  • Entertainment & Arts

    Dancers say Lizzo ‘needs to be held accountable’ over harassment claims

    Freddie Mercury: Contents of former home being sold at auction

    Harry Potter and the Cursed Child marks seven years in West End

    Sinéad O’Connor: In her own words

    Tom Jones: Neighbour surprised to find singer in flat below

    BBC presenter: What is the evidence?

    Watch: The latest on BBC presenter story… in under a minute

    Watch: George Alagiah’s extraordinary career

    BBC News presenter pays tribute to ‘much loved’ colleague George Alagiah

    Excited filmgoers: 'Barbie is everything'

  • Science
  • Health
  • In Pictures
  • Reality Check
  • Have your say
  • More
    • Newsbeat
    • Long Reads

NEWS

No Result
View All Result
Home Science

Trial to boldly grow food in space labs blasts off

April 22, 2025
in Science
13 min read
247 6
0
491
SHARES
1.4k
VIEWS
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter


Pallab Ghosh profile image
Frontier Space Realistic artist impression of a box about to be ejected into orbit. The Earth appears in the background, the white cover, bearing the name of the space cargo firm Atmos, has already been ejected and has begun its descent.Frontier Space

Artwork: The experiment will orbit the Earth for three hours before returning to Earth and splashing down off the coast of Portugal

Steak, mashed potatoes and desserts for astronauts could soon be grown from individual cells in space if an experiment launched into orbit today is successful.

A European Space Agency (ESA) project is assessing the viability of growing so-called lab-grown food in the low gravity and higher radiation in orbit and on other worlds.

ESA is funding the research to explore new ways of reducing the cost of feeding an astronaut, which can cost up to £20,000 per day.

The team involved say the experiment is a first step to developing a small pilot food production plant on the International Space Station in two years’ time.

Lab-grown food will be essential if Nasa’s objective of making humanity a multi-planetary species were to be realised, claims Dr Aqeel Shamsul, CEO and founder of Bedford-based Frontier Space, which is developing the concept with researchers at Imperial College, London.

“Our dream is to have factories in orbit and on the Moon,” he told BBC News.

“We need to build manufacturing facilities off world if we are to provide the infrastructure to enable humans to live and work in space”.

NASA Canadian astroanut Chris Hadfield on board the international space station about to gulp a green vegetable floating towards him on a spoonNASA

Astronauts enjoy eating in zero gravity, but the freeze-dried food itself is not much fun to eat

Lab-grown food involves growing food ingredients, such as protein, fat and carbohydrates in test tubes and vats and then processing them to make them look and taste like normal food.

Lab-grown chicken is already on sale in the US and Singapore and lab grown steak is awaiting approval in the UK and Israel. On Earth, there are claimed environmental benefits for the technology over traditional agricultural food production methods, such as less land use and reduced greenhouse gas emissions. But in space the primary driver is to reduce costs.

The researchers are doing the experiment because it costs so much to send astronauts food on the ISS – up to £20,000 per astronaut per day, they estimate.

Nasa, other space agencies and private sector firms plan to have a long-term presence on the Moon, in orbiting space stations and maybe one day on Mars. That will mean sending up food for tens and eventually hundreds of astronauts living and working in space – something that would be prohibitively expensive if it were sent up by rockets, according to Dr Shamsul.

Growing food in space would make much more sense, he suggests.

“We could start off simply with protein-enhanced mashed potatoes on to more complex foods which we could put together in space,” he tells me.

“But in the longer term we could put the lab-grown ingredients into a 3D printer and print off whatever you want on the space station, such as a steak!”

Sirloin steak being cut with a knife

Lab-grown steak can be produced on Earth, but can it be created in space?

This sounds like the replicator machines on Star Trek, which are able to produce food and drink from pure energy. But it is no longer the stuff of science fiction, says Dr Shamsul.

He showed me a set-up, called a bioreactor, at Imperial College’s Bezos Centre for Sustainable Proteins in west London. It comprised a brick-coloured concoction bubbling away in a test tube. The process is known as precision fermentation, which is like the fermentation used to make beer, but different: “precision” is a rebranding word for genetically engineered.

In this case a gene has been added to yeast to produce extra vitamins, but all sorts of ingredients can be produced in this way, according to Dr Rodrigo Ledesma-Amaro, Director of the Bezos Centre.

“We can make all the elements to make food,” says Dr Ledesma-Amaro proudly.

“We can make proteins, fats, carbohydrates, fibres and they can be combined to make different dishes.”

Two small flasks with several tubes emerging from them. The one on the right has coloured liquid bubbling away inside it.

The brick-coloured “food” is grown in a small biorector, a mini-version of which has been sent into space

A much smaller, simpler version of the biorector has been sent into space on a SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket as part of the ESA mission. There is plenty of evidence that foods can be successfully grown from cells on Earth, but can the process be repeated in the weightlessness and higher radiation of space?

Drs Ledesma-Amaro and Shamsul have sent small amounts of the yeast concoction to orbit the Earth in a small cube satellite on board Europe’s first commercial returnable spacecraft, Phoenix. If all goes to plan, it will orbit the Earth for around three hours before falling back to Earth off the coast of Portugal. The experiment will be retrieved by a recovery vessel and sent back to the lab in London to be examined.

The data they gather will inform the construction of a larger, better bioreactor which the scientists will send into space next year, according to Dr Ledesma-Amaro.

The problem, though, is that the brick-coloured goo, which is dried into a powder, looks distinctly unappetising – even less appetising than the freeze-dried fare that astronauts currently have to put up with.

That is where Imperial College’s master chef comes in. Jakub Radzikowski is the culinary education designer tasked with turning chemistry into cuisine.

Kevin Church Well built bald man wearing a charcole grey apron, with the words "chemical kitchen", making green-coloured dumplings while wearing blue gloves.Kevin Church

Imperial College’s master chef has the job of making lab-grown chemicals into delicious dishes

He isn’t allowed to use lab grown ingredients to make dishes for people just yet, because regulatory approval is still pending. But he’s getting a head start. For now, instead of lab-grown ingredients, Jakub is using starches and proteins from naturally occurring fungi to develop his recipes. He tells me all sorts of dishes will be possible, once he gets the go-ahead to use lab-grown ingredients.

“We want to create food that is familiar to astronauts who are from different parts of the world so that it can provide comfort.

“We can create anything from French, Chinese, Indian. It will be possible to replicate any kind of cuisine in space.”

Today, Jakub is trying out a new recipe of spicy dumplings and dipping sauce. He tells me that I am allowed to try them out, but taster-in-chief is someone far more qualified: Helen Sharman, the UK’s first astronaut, who also has a PhD in chemistry.

Kevin Church/BBC News Pallab Ghosh and Helen Sharman picking up green coloured dumplings with chopsticks.Kevin Church/BBC News

Britain’s first astronaut, Helen Sharman, and I taste test what might be the space food of the future

We tasted the steaming dumplings together.

My view: “They are absolutely gorgeous!”

Dr Sharman’s expert view, not dissimilar: “You get a really strong blast from the flavour. It is really delicious and very moreish,” she beamed.

“I would love to have had something like this. When I was in space, I had really long-life stuff: tins, freeze dried packets, tubes of stuff. It was fine, but not tasty.”

Dr Sharman’s more important observation was about the science. Lab-grown food, she said, could potentially be better for astronauts, as well as reduce costs to the levels required to make long-term off-world habitation viable.

Research on the ISS has shown that the biochemistry of astronauts’ bodies changes during long duration space missions: their hormone balance and iron levels alter, and they lose calcium from their bones. Astronauts take supplements to compensate, but lab-grown food could in principle be tweaked with the extra ingredients already built in, says Dr Sharman.

“Astronauts tend to lose weight because they are not eating as much because they don’t have the variety and interest in their diet,” she told me.

“So, astronauts might be more open to having something that has been cooked from scratch and a feeling that you are really eating wholesome food.”

A thin, grey banner promoting the News Daily newsletter. On the right, there is a graphic of an orange sphere with two concentric crescent shapes around it in a red-orange gradient, like a sound wave. The banner reads: "The latest news in your inbox first thing.”

Get our flagship newsletter with all the headlines you need to start the day. Sign up here.



Source link

Tags: blastsboldlyfoodgrowlabsSpacetrial

Related Posts

Turbines turning from wind to sustainable products

July 4, 2026
0

The company's Chief Executive Andrew Billingsley said finding a way to take blade waste beyond the end of its...

Thousands of fish killed in Bromley park pollution mystery

July 3, 2026
0

Thames Water, which operates the local drainage network, said it was "urgently investigating the pollution incident" but its cause...

Knockin radio telescope may shut amid funding cuts, scientists fear

July 2, 2026
0

A radio telescope in Shropshire with a 25m (82ft) diameter dish, could be at risk of closing because of...

  • Australia helicopter collision: Mid-air clash wreckage covers Gold Coast

    523 shares
    Share 209 Tweet 131
  • UK inflation: Supermarkets say price rises will ease soon

    515 shares
    Share 206 Tweet 129
  • Ballyjamesduff: Man dies after hit-and-run in County Cavan

    510 shares
    Share 204 Tweet 128
  • Somalia: Rare access to its US-funded 'lightning commando brigade

    508 shares
    Share 203 Tweet 127
  • Google faces new multi-billion advertising lawsuit

    508 shares
    Share 203 Tweet 127
  • Trending
  • Comments
  • Latest

Australia helicopter collision: Mid-air clash wreckage covers Gold Coast

January 10, 2023

UK inflation: Supermarkets say price rises will ease soon

April 19, 2023

Ballyjamesduff: Man dies after hit-and-run in County Cavan

August 19, 2022

Stranger Things actor Jamie Campbell Bower praised for addiction post

0

NHS to close Tavistock child gender identity clinic

0

Cold sores traced back to kissing in Bronze Age by Cambridge research

0

Turbines turning from wind to sustainable products

July 4, 2026

Newspaper headlines: Storm threat to England match and ‘bid to block Miliband’

July 4, 2026

Why are music fans choosing to wear ear plugs at festivals?

July 4, 2026

Categories

Science

Turbines turning from wind to sustainable products

July 4, 2026
0

The company's Chief Executive Andrew Billingsley said finding a way to take blade waste beyond the end of its...

Read more

Newspaper headlines: Storm threat to England match and ‘bid to block Miliband’

July 4, 2026
News

Copyright © 2020 JBC News Powered by JOOJ.us

Explore the JBC

  • Home
  • News
  • Sport
  • Worklife
  • Travel
  • Reel
  • Future
  • More

Follow Us

  • Home Main
  • Video
  • World
  • Top News
  • Business
  • Sport
  • Tech
  • UK
  • In Pictures
  • Health
  • Reality Check
  • Science
  • Entertainment & Arts
  • Login

Copyright © 2020 JBC News Powered by JOOJ.us

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Create New Account!

Fill the forms bellow to register

All fields are required. Log In

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In
This website uses cookies. By continuing to use this website you are giving consent to cookies being used. Visit our Privacy and Cookie Policy.
News
More Sites

    MORE

  • Home
  • News
  • Sport
  • Worklife
  • Travel
  • Reel
  • Future
  • More
  • News

    JBC News