The BulleTin • Thursday, May 13, 2021 A13 Whole Foods founder John Mackey invests in maker of lab-grown meat BY DEENA SHANKER Bloomberg A prominent producer of cultivated meat is renam- ing itself and announcing its first commercial plans — and has secured investment from Whole Foods Market and its founder, John Mackey. The moves by Upside Foods, formerly known as Memphis Meats, show the industry is ready to sell its products to the public when there’s U.S. regula- tory approval. While it’s unclear when or if the products will get a green light, Upside CEO Uma Valeti says his company is pre- pared to move quickly. Chicken will be the first cultured meat product that it offers. “We are looking for the ear- liest possible date and we’ll be ready,” Valeti said. “If it is by end of year, we’ll be ready, if it’s a little longer, we’ll be ready.” Cellular agriculture compa- nies, which produce proteins like beef and chicken by grow- ing meat from cells instead of slaughtering live animals, must get approval from the U.S. De- partment of Agriculture and the Food and Drug Adminis- Toyota Continued from A11 Early implementation of infection-prevention mea- sures and a timely ramp up of production in China, where virus-related disruptions dis- sipated relatively early, meant Toyota has been able to in- crease its global output above the previous year’s level each month since August. That allowed Toyota to meet demand for cars that rose swiftly in regions begin- ning to emerge from lock- down. Overall, unit sales for the fiscal year ended in March were down just 4% versus the previous year. Amid the gloom, Toyota’s results “stand out as particu- tration before they can offer their products to the public. There is no public timeline for this, but industry execu- tives have expressed optimism. Companies are currently await- ing guidance on labeling stan- dards, which would be an im- portant step toward retail sales. “We are ready for business and we want to put products in front of the consumer,” Va- leti said. Mackey, who invested about $500,000 of his money in Up- side, said cultured meat has an important role to play as con- sumers start to look at more al- ternatives to meat. “This could change the world in a very good way be- cause of the horrendous suf- fering that livestock animals go through, the tremendous damage that industrial agri- culture has done to the envi- ronment,” Mackey said in an interview. Whole Foods, which also in- vested an undisclosed amount in Upside, would be an import- ant retail partner. Mackey said no decisions have been made about carrying Upside prod- ucts, but “I hope that we do.” The industry has seen mo- mentum build recently. In early 2020, Upside raised $161 million in new funding. That round eventually swelled to $186 million and included the investments from Whole Foods and Mackey. SoftBank Group Corp. and Cargill Inc. also participated. There are now more than 70 cellular meat companies glob- ally cultivating meats ranging from chicken to foie gras to kangaroo. Cultured meat could make up as much as 35% of the $1.8 trillion global meat mar- ket by 2040, according to an es- timate from Kearney. The environmental ben- efits, however, remain to be proven. Cultured meat will still produce emissions from heating and electricity, a recent assessment by environmen- tal researcher CE Delft found. Based on nations’ stated power and gas policies for 2030, culti- vated meat is expected to have a lower environmental im- pact than beef, but higher than chicken, pork and plant-based alternatives. larly bright,” Bloomberg Intel- ligence analyst Tatsuo Yoshida said. The company’s sales are proving sturdy, he said. Stronger-than-anticipated demand for cars threw the auto industry for a loop at the beginning of 2021 when many were hit with the realization they hadn’t ordered enough chips to raise their output. The failure to secure semiconduc- tors, which are crucial to mak- ing tech-laden modern cars, is expected to result in millions of lost vehicle sales this year. Experts are saying the dearth will probably get worse before it gets better. The chip shortage is likely to impact 500,000 units of Nissan’s output this current fiscal year, though it aims to recover about half of those losses in the latter half of the year when the crunch begins to ease, said Nissan Chief Executive Officer Makoto Uchida, speaking at a briefing Tuesday. Toyota has emerged rela- tively unscathed up until this point thanks to its practice of monitoring small suppli- ers and stockpiling chips, al- though a fire that broke out at an automotive chip plant owned by Renesas Electronics Corp. in March still poses a risk to the whole of Japan’s au- tomotive sector. Toyota’s hybrid system of keeping inventory of some crucial parts gave it a leg up on other automakers depend- ing heavily on the ‘Just-in- Prices Continued from A11 Energy costs, though, edged down 0.1%, with gaso- line pump prices falling 1.4%, the biggest drop since May 2020. Economists warned, though, that gasoline prices could go higher this month, depending on how long a shut- down lasts after the cyberat- tack on the Colonial Pipeline, which supplies the East Coast with 45% of its fuel. COVID-19 Continued from A11 Michelle Rogers, Meredith’s mother, said she hoped the youth vaccinations would help bring some normalcy back. “A little apprehensive, but you know what? This is a step towards getting life back to normal so, we’re all in,” Mi- chelle Rogers said with a slight fist pump. Earlier in the week, the Food and Drug Administra- tion authorized emergency use of the two-shot vaccine made by Pfizer and its Ger- man partner, BioNTech. A study of more than 2,000 time’ manufacturing strat- egy of keeping a low stock of goods on hand. As the shortage drags on, Toyota still expects to have sufficient semiconductors for production in the near term, though the summer months get a little cloudier, Bob Car- ter, Toyota’s top sales executive in the U.S., said in a recent in- terview. Indeed, the company’s per- formance in the fiscal year just ended was impressive. Even though sales revenue dipped, net income increased on the strength of Toyota’s financial services business and margins rose to 8.3% from 6.8%. The company’s deep con- tingency planning is putting it in a good position to reap Last month, Powell sug- gested at a news conference that Fed officials expect infla- tion to move above its 2% an- nual target over the next few months, in part because of what economists call the base effect: Year-over-year inflation will look larger in April and May because those months are compared with the same months in 2020, when prices were sinking as the pandemic shut down much of the coun- try. Those year-over-year fig- ures should look smaller once they are compared with later months in 2020, by which time many prices had recovered. The Fed has said it will allow prices to rise slightly above 2% for a period of time to make up for the past decade’s short- falls in inflation. Powell has said that as long as the increase in inflation doesn’t appear to be hurting consumer and business expec- tations about price increases, the central bank would be will- ing to let prices rise without acting to raise interest rates. 12- to 15-year-olds found the same dose adults use is safe and strongly protective in the kids, too. Among the outstanding questions: Is it OK to get vac- cinated against COVID-19 at the same doctor’s visit as people receive some routine vaccinations? That’s an urgent back-to-school concern espe- cially for the 12- to 15-year- olds, who have missed out on regularly scheduled vaccines during the pandemic — but also an issue for adults, too. The CDC until now has recommended not getting other vaccinations within two weeks of a COVID-19 shot, mostly as a precaution so that safety monitors could spot if any unexpected side effects crop up. But the CDC said Wednesday it is changing that advice because the COVID-19 vaccines have proved so safe — and that health workers can decide to give another needed vaccine at the same time. The American Academy of Pediatrics on Wednesday also endorsed the Pfizer vaccine for the 12-and-up crowd — and agreed that it’s fine to give more than one vaccine at the same time, especially for kids who are behind on their regu- lar vaccinations. sales from consumers in the U.S. and China who are snap- ping up cars, emboldened by signs the pandemic is waning. Toyota’s global sales in March rose 44% to 982,912 units, an all-time record for a single month. The company expects sales for the current fiscal year to touch 10.6 million. Electri- fied vehicle sales alone should reach 8 million units by 2030. Toyota recently announced plans to introduce 15 EVs globally by 2025, quelling to a certain extent concerns the automaker is falling behind rivals like VW in its develop- ment of electric cars. Something few realize is how long Toyota has been develop- ing EVs, Toyota Chief Digital Officer James Kuffner said at a briefing Wednesday. With 25 years of experience developing EV components like motors and power electronics, “Toyota is strongly positioned to lead the world in the best, reliable, low-cost battery-electric vehi- cles,” Kuffner said. Toyota shares rose as much as 2.7% Wednesday, before closing up 2.2%, bringing gains for the year to around 7%. The company will do a five-for-one share split per the register as of Sept. 30. The purpose of the stock split is “to reduce the minimum in- vestment price, thereby creat- ing an environment where it is easier to invest in our shares,” Toyota said in its earnings statement.