Experts look to edible bugs to help ameliorate food scarcity

Living on Earth

Insects are viable food options, says a recent report from the United Nations' Food and Agriculture Organization, and with the world population estimated to reach 9 billion people by 2050, some are suggesting bugs as a real solution to a serious problem. 

Several countries, including the Netherlands and Thailand already harvest insects on a commercial scale. Thailand's edible crickets business, sometimes called "six-legged livestock," is already a $30 million industry. 

Dave Gracer has been running an edible bug business in Rhode Island called Small Stock Foods since 2009. 

"From my point of view, the way that humans feed themselves now, basically, represents a big middle finger to the natural world," Gracer said. "Look at the future, look at what's coming our way. It's really kind of terrifying."

For now, Small Stock Foods is a modest business. Gracer said he fills an average of ten orders a year, mostly filled by avant-garde restaurants, novelty party planners and clients looking to add shock value to their meals. 

"Dos Equis had a sales campaign, a promo; 'The Most Interesting Taco in the World' to go with 'The Most Interesting Man,' and so they had gourmet taco trucks in a couple of different cities that wanted to do the most interesting tacos and they want the most scorpion tacos," Gracer said. 

Though the conception of eating insects in the United States may been previously stuck on gross-out reality shows like Fear Factor, Gracer said some are coming around to the idea of bugs as a source of food in the future. Dave Gracer holds an insect. (Photo courtesy of Emmett FitzGerald)

"There are companies now working to produce industrial commercial supplies of insects for human consumption in the U.S. and that is of the last 18 months," he said. 

Gracer estimates he has eaten some 60 species of arthropods, as well as scorpions, a giant centipede, and roly-polies — which he says are "quite good."

Killing insects, though, sometimes makes Gracer feel guilty. 

"They're animals you know, they would prefer to avoid dismemberment or death just like you and me," he said. 

Still, Gracer prefers the more neutral harvesting of bugs to slaughterhouses or industrial farms.

"I am reacting to these insects the way any other predator would," Gracer said. "It’s an honest exchange of energies like you know what, if I can get you, I will."

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