Israeli foodtech startup Future Meat raises $347 million funding to bolster position in cultivated meat industry

Israeli foodtech startup Future Meat raises $347 million funding to bolster position in cultivated meat industry

Published: 04-01-2022 10:02:23 | By: Bob Koigi | hits: 3615 | Tags:

Future Meat Technologies, an Israeli startup developing innovative technology to produce cultivated meat, has announced that it has raised $347 million in Series B round of financing.

The round was co-led by ADM Ventures, the venture investing arm of ADM, a global leader in human and animal nutrition. It also included participation from a global investor in leading technology companies, the Menora Mivtachim pension and insurance fund which manages over $85 billion in assets, and S2G Ventures.

Other investors included industry leaders Tyson Ventures, the venture capital arm of Tyson Foods and Rich Products Ventures, Manta Ray Ventures, Emerald Technology Ventures, ADM Capital (Cibus Fund), and Bits x Bites. The company noted these investors represent massive support from key players in North America, Europe, and Asia.

Professor Yaakov Nahmias, founder and president, Future Meat: "We are incredibly excited by the massive support of our global network of strategic and financial investors. This financing consolidates Future Meat's position as the leading player in the cultivated meat industry, just three years after our launch. Our singular technology reduced production costs faster than anyone thought possible, paving the way for a massive expansion of operations. Our team will break ground on the first-of-its-kind, large-scale production facility in the United States in 2022."

Ian Pinner, senior vice president of strategy and innovation, ADM: "We're excited to expand our relationship with Future Meat and expand the universe of new sources of protein to consumers who are increasingly diversifying their diets. Partnerships like these are one of the key ways ADM is creating and capturing new value in growth segments like alternative proteins, and we're eager to support the Future Meat team in their efforts to continue developing groundbreaking solutions that will provide high-quality and scalable cultivated meat products to consumers in the years to come."

Future Meat opened the world's first cultivated meat production line in Israel earlier this year, and is now scouting several locations in the United States for its projected large scale production facility.

Nahmias: "While Future Meat is leading the pack as the fastest growing company in this space, I truly see the entire cultivated meat industry as a massive agent of change, creating a sustainable future for coming generations.”

Alongside its Series B funding, the company also announced that it is now producing cultivated chicken breast for just $7.70 per pound, or $1.70 per 110-gram chicken breast, down from under $18 per pound just six months ago. This cost reduction already surpassed the 18-month timeline projection that was announced in May of 2021 by the company's former chief executive Rom Kshuk.

Moses Talbi, EVP Finance & Business Development, Future Meat: "This financial round is a testament to the strong relationship between Future Meat and the food industry, built over the last few years by the current leadership and the company's former CEO," said 

Prof. Nahmias: "We have consistently demonstrated that our single-cell technology and serum-free media formulations can reach cost parity faster than the market anticipates." He previously described the space as the Apollo program of the 21st century.

Future Meat's proprietary technology is based on stainless steel fermenters which continuously remove waste products generated by "immortal" tissue cells.

This allows the company to maintain a constant physiological environment which supports rapid, natural, proliferation of animal cells. The company proved that this connective tissue method is more robust and efficient than others using stem cells, and that its rejuvenating fermenters can recycle over 70% of the nutrients.

 It is also most cost-efficient manner available today, a key factor enabling Future Meat's industry-leading low costs, which has been the largest hurdle in bringing cultivated meat to cost parity with traditional meat.

www.future-meat.com