China ‘cloning factory’ to produce cattle, racehorses and pets
![britexpat](https://files.qatarliving.com/styles/60x60/s3/21_3614824_0.gif?itok=H35xrA7o)
World’s largest cloning facility in China aims to produce a million cattle a year, along with other animals
Interest in agricultural biotechnology has been rapidly increasing in China, where farmers are battling to provide enough beef for the country’s growing middle classes Photo: Bloomberg
The £21 million “commercial” facility will edge the controversial science “closer to mainstream acceptance”, Chinese media said, following the development of a technique which began when Dolly the sheep became the first cloned mammal when she was born in Scotland in 1996.
The centre may cause alarm in Europe, where the cloning of animals for farming was banned in September due to animal welfare considerations.
But Xu Xiaochun, chairman of Chinese biotechnology company BoyaLife that is backing the facility, dismissed such concerns.
“Let me ask one question. Was this ban based on scientific rationale or ethical rationale or political agenda?” Mr Xu told The Telegraph.
“Legislation is always behind science. But in the area of cloning, I think we are going the wrong way and starting to kill the technology.”
Mr Xu said his new facility will clone racehorses and a handful of dogs for people with “emotional ties” to their pets, but its main focus was producing cattle.
However, he appeared to be more excited about its ability to churn out sniffer dogs.
“The dog has to be smart and obedient, strong, sensitive," he said. "That's one in one hundred. You would normally have to look at a large number of dogs to find this one."
BoyaLife will operate the facility with its South Korean partner, Sooam Biotech, that runs a centre that can clone dogs for customers willing to pay $100,000 (£66,000), and has already produced more than 550 puppies.
The new facility will initially produce 100,000 cattle embryos a year, eventually increasing to one million.
The European Parliament’s environment committee co-rapporteur, Renate Sommer, has criticised the technique of cloning as not being “fully mature” as members voted on the ban in September.
“In fact, no further progress has been made with it,” Ms Sommer said at the time. “The mortality rate remains equally high. Many of the animals which are born alive die in the first few weeks, and they die painfully. Should we allow that?"
So what say you.. Is it ethical ? Is it the answer to our food problems ?
hahaha --- well that would be Multiplicity all over again ! :D
Kinky !!!!
It's still him, brit. No problem. He could watch himself being .....!
What if your beloved comes to prefer the clone ?
Where can I sign up? I want to clone myself. I rarely got time to do recreational stuff since I work round the clock! With a clone double, he can work in my stead, while I enjoy the good life! don't you think this plan is more sound than wasting cloning on pets?! :D
I find pets weird.
There are ofcourse two sides to this. one is the cloning of cattle, sheep, pigs etc for food. the other is the cloning of animals as pets.
I find the cloning of pets a little weird. i don't know why i should.
There isn't a food problem. There is only a distribution problem.