I hope every entrepreneur and business leader takes a moment to see if Mother Nature has already created what they're trying to create or achieve in the marketplace.
Among the many ways for a business to respond to our climate crisis, there's one
approach that may seem far-fetched: Herding chickens.
But efficiently guiding masses of the birds is just what California’s
Pasturebird
does. The trick lies in putting wheels on the animals' coops and easily rolling
them from one patch of land to another. The birds move in conjunction with their
mobile homes, grazing the earth and fertilizing it with their droppings as they
go. The company claims the result is not just healthier chickens, but also a
healthier soil ecosystem better able to capture and store carbon dioxide — one
of the most notorious contributors to the environmental chaos we see in the news
every day.
Big deal, you might say. What are a few thousand chickens going to do? But for
businesses to evolve into truly sustainable operations that can protect and
preserve our tiny home while affordably meeting human beings' needs and wants,
we must not cynically dismiss nature-based solutions akin to Pasturebird's — but
explore and support them more widely and deeply. With a global population of 8
billion people today and 10 billion expected in 2050, the principles behind this
type of approach offer a path toward harvesting the gifts of Earth's ecosystems
without throwing them dangerously out of balance.
The underlying concept I implore everyone to explore is simple: Nature already
knows. The Earth has had billions of years to develop efficient and
environmentally sound methods to support living things while keeping ecosystems
in balance. You don't always need to reinvent the wheel. Sometimes it's valuable
to take a moment to recognize that as one of the youngest species on the planet,
we may not have all the answers. Despite everything we may have achieved with
the Green Revolution, we still
need to listen, watch, and learn. Raise chickens in a more clever way, for
example, and you might have a way to regenerate the land while selling eggs and
protein. Bison can double your plant
diversity
while putting meat on people's plates. Mangrove trees can protect
coastlines
while supporting wildlife and fishermen. Wolves can bring your national park
back.
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We may not understand every detail of how nature pulls off its incredible
balancing acts, but that doesn't mean we can't work with it. Harmony, not
absolute control, is the goal. Not that I am proposing this is the correct
response to every situation — given the scope and complexity of the challenges,
it cannot and should not be. We need an "and/and" mindset that is open to all
innovations that collectively move us closer to a more balanced relationship
with our planet; and different approaches will be able to scale to different
degrees. Whether new or traditional, small and smart local solutions can and
should work hand in hand with big solutions at the regional, national and global
level.
How to accomplish this is less clear than why. It can be difficult, involving
basic scientific research. But the rewards make it worth the effort. On the way
to co-founding and becoming CEO of Meati Foods, a company
dedicated to sustainably feeding the world, I spent years exploring Mother
Nature's toolbox — hunting for a hyper-efficient way to provide a high-quality
alternative
protein
that people would love. We settled on a species of fungi that met all the
requirements of holistic sustainability in the food industry: remarkable
nutrition, flavor adaptability, consumption safety, growth efficiency, a simple
ingredient list, and amenability to scaling in a controlled indoor environment —
all of which comes together to generate consumer satisfaction, affordability,
supply chain robustness, and mass distribution that should help mitigate the
food system's impact on the environment.
As you investigate nature-based business solutions, many factors and
calculations to consider will be unique to your industry. The devil, of course,
is in the details. But at a high level, these are some of the most important
concerns to keep front and center:
-
Energy in, energy out: In the most abstract terms, landing on a
sustainable method of production comes down to weighing the costs of
everything going into making something with the benefits coming out. Be
thorough. On the costs side, examine all three scopes of a life cycle
assessment
(LCA).
Ask how efficiently your nature-based approach converts raw materials into
something useful. On the benefits side, don't forget the less-efficient
practices you may be displacing — thus, preserving resources integral to the
environment's health. For example, if plant-based alternative
meats
took the place of animal-based options even just a day or two a week across
the globe, we could "spend" more of our land, water and air on
sustainability goals by simply leaving them alone.
-
Go small to go big: Some of nature's most remarkable processes aren't as
easy to see as chickens, bison, or trees. You may need to delve into the
world of basic scientific research and microscopes to find a solution that
works for you. The cellular processes of fungi and
fermentation are
proving to be an adaptable, efficient, and powerful route to meeting our
needs while protecting the planet. Mycelium — the vegetative body of fungi
that is sometimes referred to as "mushroom root" — has been used to produce
more sustainable protein sources by Meati, Nature's
Fynd,
Quorn,
MycoWorks
and others. Fungi are also showing
up in
clothes,
digesting plastics,
batteries,
construction,
packaging and even computer
chips.
Other interesting examples of micro-to-macro solutions include Impossible
Foods'
heme
that relies on fermentation; and the controversial but
important
growth of meat from animal cells, which the FDA has already
supported.
-
Adaptability: If identifying and understanding an efficient, existing
natural process is the first step to scaling up, then the next step is
ensuring it can be guided to achieve your big-picture outcome — whether the
large-volume generation of products on a predictable schedule, ecosystem
remediation, the reduction of less-efficient resource consumption, or a
combination of all three. Fungi, for instance, happily grow in a variety of
conditions — allowing them to be crafted into products that can be
realistically incorporated into the mass market. Another example might be
regenerative agricultural
practices
— such as crop
rotation,
no-till
farming,
and biological pest
control
— being implementable in different types of farming operations all over the
world, scaling the impact of the practices by spreading them throughout a
loosely connected network.
-
Culture matters: Given an array of choices — and if no judgmental eyes
are present — many consumers will choose individually pleasing options at
the moment of purchase over collectively "righter" ones. If people don't
love what you’re making and they have another alternative before them, all
the impressive planet-saving power in the world will go nowhere. For
instance, despite the environmental benefits of plant-based alternative
meats, they have experienced a
downturn
due to challenges with taste, texture, nutrition and affordability. There is
an element of trust in these calculations and making sure your product
delivers what is promised. Invest energy in doing proper LCAs that back up
your environmental claims; and make sure to earn stamps of approval from
regulatory bodies such as the FDA. After all, without the support of all the
individuals and institutions that pave the way toward the public welcoming
something seemingly new, even the most innovative and sustainable product
won’t succeed.
While nature-based solutions cannot solve every problem human beings face, they
can be an incredible addition to our collective toolkit. I hope every
entrepreneur and business leader takes a moment to see if Mother Nature has
already created what they're trying to manufacture. It may be that the answers
to our questions about building a sustainable future are already right in front
of us.
Published Feb 10, 2023 7am EST / 4am PST / 12pm GMT / 1pm CET
Co-founder & CEO
Meati
Tyler Huggins is co-founder and CEO of Meati Foods — a mycelium-based alternative meat brand, based in Colorado.