Florida 2024 2024 Regular Session

Florida House Bill H0435 Analysis / Analysis

Filed 01/19/2024

                    This docum ent does not reflect the intent or official position of the bill sponsor or House of Representatives. 
STORAGE NAME: h0435a.ACR 
DATE: 1/19/2024 
 
HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES STAFF ANALYSIS  
 
BILL #: HB 435    Cultivated Meat 
SPONSOR(S): Sirois 
TIED BILLS:   IDEN./SIM. BILLS: SB 586 
 
REFERENCE 	ACTION ANALYST STAFF DIRECTOR or 
BUDGET/POLICY CHIEF 
1) Agriculture, Conservation & Resiliency 
Subcommittee 
10 Y, 4 N Gawin Moore 
2) Agriculture & Natural Resources Appropriations 
Subcommittee 
   
3) Infrastructure Strategies Committee   
SUMMARY ANALYSIS 
The ability to take a small number of cells from living animals and grow them in a controlled environment to 
create food made from cultured animal cells is an emerging area of food science. Advancements in cell culture 
technology enable food developers to use cells obtained from livestock, poultry, seafood, or other animals in 
the production of food. Food products made with cultured animal cells are called a variety of names, including 
cultured meat, cultivated meat, cell-based meat, and lab-grown meat. 
 
In 2019, the United States Food and Drug Administration (FDA) and the Food Safety and Inspection Service 
(FSIS) within the U.S. Department of Agriculture agreed to establish a joint regulatory framework for human 
foods made from cultured cells of livestock and poultry. Under this agreement, generally, the FDA oversees the 
collection, growth, and the differentiation of living cells into various cell types. Regulatory authority then shifts 
to FSIS during the harvesting stage of the cell-culturing process, and FSIS oversight continues during the 
processing, labeling, and packing of cultivated meat products. Two companies have been approved to sell 
cultivated chicken products in the U.S. 
 
The Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services (DACS) is the agency responsible for the enforcement 
of the production, manufacture, transportation, and sale of food in the state. DACS’s Division of Food Safety is 
directly responsible for assuring the public of a safe, wholesome, and properly represented food supply. 
 
The bill defines “cultivated meat” to mean any meat or food product produced from cultured animal cells. 
 
The bill prohibits any person from manufacturing, selling, holding or offering for sale, or distributing cultivated 
meat in the state and specifies that a person who violates this prohibition commits a second-degree 
misdemeanor.   
 
The bill specifies that a food establishment that distributes or sells cultivated meat is subject to fines and 
revocation or suspension of the food establishment’s permit. Additionally, the bill specifies that the license of 
any restaurant, store, or other business may be suspended as provided for in the applicable licensing law upon 
the conviction of the owner or employee of that business for a violation in connection with that business. The 
bill further specifies that any cultivated meat products are subject to an immediate stop-sale order as well as 
embargo, detainment, or destruction. 
 
The bill may have an indeterminate negative fiscal impact on state government.    STORAGE NAME: h0435a.ACR 	PAGE: 2 
DATE: 1/19/2024 
  
FULL ANALYSIS 
I.  SUBSTANTIVE ANALYSIS 
 
A. EFFECT OF PROPOSED CHANGES: 
Background  
 
Cultivated Meat Production  
The ability to take a small number of cells from living animals and grow them in a controlled 
environment to create food made from cultured animal cells is an emerging area of food science. 
Advancements in cell culture technology enable food developers to use cells obtained from livestock, 
poultry, seafood, or other animals in the production of food.
1
 Food products made with cultured animal 
cells are called a variety of names, including cultured meat, cultivated meat, cell-based meat, and lab-
grown meat.
2
  
 
To make food products with cultured animal cells, scientists typically start with a sample of cells from 
the tissue of an animal, a process that does not permanently harm or kill the animal.
3
 Cells are 
selected, screened, and grown to make a “bank” of cells to store for later use.
4
 The cell type used has a 
significant impact on the parameters used in the production process, as each cell type has its particular 
requirements that might be beneficial for or detrimental to efficient production.
5
 To make cultivated 
meat, a small number of cells are taken from the cell bank and placed in a tightly controlled and 
monitored environment that supports growth and cellular multiplication by supplying appropriate 
nutrients and other factors.
6
 Then, various factors, such as protein growth components, new surfaces 
for cell attachment, and additional nutrients, are added to the cell environment to differentiate the cells 
into the various cell types so they can assume the characteristics of muscle, fat, or connective tissue 
cells.
7
 Once the cells have differentiated into the desired type, the cellular material can be harvested 
from the controlled environment and prepared using conventional food processing and packaging 
methods.
8
  
 
A simplified graphic of the process of cultivating meat from cells is depicted below:
9
  
 
                                                
1
 United States Food and Drug Administration (FDA), Human Food Made with Cultured Animal Cells, 
https://www.fda.gov/food/food-ingredients-packaging/human-food-made-cultured-animal-cells (last visited Jan. 2, 2024).  
2
 Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO) & World Health Organization (WHO), Food Safety Aspects of Cell-
based Food (2023), 6-8, available at https://doi.org/10.4060/cc4855en (last visited Jan. 2, 2024).  
3
 United States Department of Agriculture (USDA), Human Food Made with Cultured Animal Cells, 
https://www.fsis.usda.gov/inspection/compliance-guidance/labeling/labeling-policies/human-food-made-cultured-animal-cells (last 
visited Jan. 2, 2024).  
4
 Id. Examples of cells used in this process include non-differentiated stem cells, muscle precursor cells, fibroblasts, or adipose-
derived cells. FAO & WHO, Food Safety Aspects of Cell-based Food (2023), 19, available at https://doi.org/10.4060/cc4855en (last 
visited Jan. 2, 2024).  
5
 FAO & WHO, Food Safety Aspects of Cell-based Food (2023), 21, available at https://doi.org/10.4060/cc4855en (last visited Jan. 2, 
2024). 
6
 USDA, Human Food Made with Cultured Animal Cells, https://www.fsis.usda.gov/inspection/compliance-
guidance/labeling/labeling-policies/human-food-made-cultured-animal-cells (last visited Jan. 2, 2024). 
7
 Id.  
8
 Id. 
9
 FAO & WHO, Food Safety Aspects of Cell-based Food (2023), 19, available at https://doi.org/10.4060/cc4855en (last visited Jan. 2, 
2024).  STORAGE NAME: h0435a.ACR 	PAGE: 3 
DATE: 1/19/2024 
  
 
 
Federal Regulation of Cultivated Meat 
In 2019, the United States Food and Drug Administration (FDA) and the Food Safety and Inspection 
Service (FSIS) within the U. S. Department of Agriculture (USDA), agreed to establish a joint regulatory 
framework for human foods made from cultured cells of livestock and poultry.
10
 Under this agreement, 
generally, the FDA oversees the collection, growth, and differentiation of living cells into various cell 
types.
11
 Regulatory authority then shifts to the FSIS during the harvesting stage of the cell-culturing 
process, and FSIS oversight continues during the processing, labeling, and packing of cultivated meat 
products.
12
 However, products for human consumption that are made from seafood or game meat and 
products for animal consumption are regulated solely by the FDA.
13
 Two companies have been 
approved to sell cultivated chicken products in the U. S.
14
 These products have been sold as prepared 
food on limited menus in restaurants in San Francisco and Washington, D.C.
 15
 Currently, raw 
cultivated meat products are not being sold directly to consumers. 
 
FDA Regulatory Oversight 
The FDA encourages establishments interested in bringing cultivated meat products to market to do a 
voluntary pre-market consultation with the FDA. The pre-market evaluation assesses the production 
process and produced biological material, including tissue collection, cell lines and banks, 
manufacturing controls, and all components and inputs.
16
 After a successful pre-market safety 
consultation, the FDA conducts routine inspections on an ongoing basis, as well as other oversight 
activities at cell banks and facilities where cells are cultured, differentiated, and harvested.
17
 The FDA 
                                                
10
 FDA, Formal Agreement Between FDA and USDA Regarding Oversight of Human Food Produced Using Animal Cell Technology 
Derived from Cell Lines of USDA-amenable Species, https://www.fda.gov/food/domestic-interagency-agreements-food-
expired/formal-agreement-between-fda-and-usda-regarding-oversight-human-food-produced-using-animal-cell (last visited Jan. 2, 
2024). 
11
 USDA, Human Food Made with Cultured Animal Cells, https://www.fsis.usda.gov/inspection/compliance-
guidance/labeling/labeling-policies/human-food-made-cultured-animal-cells (last visited Jan. 2, 2024). 
12
 Id.  
13
 Id. 
14
 FDA, Human Food Made with Cultured Animal Cells Inventory, 
https://www.cfsanappsexternal.fda.gov/scripts/fdcc/?set=AnimalCellCultureFoods (last visited Dec. 18, 2023). 
15
 CNN, Lab-grown chicken debuts in San Francisco Restaurant, https://www.cnn.com/2023/07/01/business/lab-grown-chicken-san-
francisco/index.html (last visited Dec. 18, 2023); NPR, We Tried That ‘Lab-grown’ Chicken at One of Jose Andres’ D.C. Restaurants, 
https://www.npr.org/local/305/2023/08/03/1191810646/we-tried-that-lab-grown-chicken-at-one-of-jose-andres-d-c-restaurants (last 
visited Dec. 18, 2023).  
16
 FDA, Human Food Made with Cultured Animal Cells, https://www.fda.gov/food/food-ingredients-packaging/human-food-made-
cultured-animal-cells (last visited Nov. 29, 2023); The FDA publishes completed pre-market consultations which contain a description 
of the food and species origin; a file number that the FDA has assigned to the pre-market consultation; the sponsor’s final submission 
in the consultation explaining their basis for concluding that the cultured animal cell material is safe for use as a human food; the letter 
the FDA sent in response to the sponsor at the completion of the pre-market consultation; and a scientific memo that documents the 
FDA’s evaluation of the sponsor’s final submission. FDA, Inventory of Completed Pre-market Consultations for Human Food Made 
with Cultured Animal Cells, https://www.fda.gov/food/human-food-made-cultured-animal-cells/inventory-completed-pre-market-
consultations-human-food-made-cultured-animal-cells (last visited Jan. 2, 2024).  
17
 FDA, Human Food Made with Cultured Animal Cells, https://www.fda.gov/food/food-ingredients-packaging/human-food-made-
cultured-animal-cells (last visited Jan. 2, 2024).  STORAGE NAME: h0435a.ACR 	PAGE: 4 
DATE: 1/19/2024 
  
has completed two pre-market consultations for cultivated meat, both for meat cultivated from chicken 
cells.
18
  
 
FSIS Regulatory Oversight  
Establishments that intend to harvest or process cell-cultured meat must apply for and obtain a USDA 
grant of inspection for such products using existing procedures.
19
 The establishment also must meet all 
applicable FSIS regulatory requirements, including the requirements for ensuring sanitation and 
developing and implementing the Hazard Analysis and Critical Control Points system.
20
 The USDA 
directs establishments that seek to harvest cultivated meat to complete an FDA pre-market safety 
consultation prior to applying for a USDA grant of inspection.
21
 FSIS regulates cultivated meat products 
under existing food safety inspection regulations and has stated that it does not intend to establish new 
food safety inspection regulations specific to cultivated meat. However, FSIS has initiated rulemaking to 
create new labeling requirements for cultivated meat products.
22
 
 
Importing Cultivated Meat 
Like traditionally produced meat, imports of cultivated meat must originate from eligible countries
23
 and 
from establishments or plants that are certified to export to the U.S.
24
 Countries that are eligible to 
export to the U.S. have gone through an equivalence process through which FSIS determines whether 
its inspection system achieves the same level of public health protection as is applied by FSIS in the 
U.S.
25
 All imported cultivated meat products are subject to FSIS labeling requirements.
26
 Similarly, all 
imported cultivated meats regulated by the FDA are subject to the same legal requirements as 
domestically produced food, including requirements related to unapproved additives, color additives, or 
other substances that may adulterate food.
27
  
 
Florida Food Safety  
The Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services (DACS) is the agency responsible for the 
enforcement of the production, manufacture, transportation, and sale of food. DACS’s Division of Food 
Safety is directly responsible for assuring the public of a safe, wholesome, and properly represented 
food supply.
28
 The division accomplishes this through the permitting and inspection of food 
establishments,
29
 the inspection and evaluation of food products, and the performance of specialized 
laboratory testing on a variety of food products sold or produced in Florida. The division also proactively 
monitors food from manufacturing and distribution to retail.  
 
                                                
18
 FDA, Human Food Made with Cultured Animal Cells Inventory, 
https://www.cfsanappsexternal.fda.gov/scripts/fdcc/?set=AnimalCellCultureFoods (last visited Jan. 2, 2024).  
19
 USDA, Human Food Made with Cultured Animal Cells, https://www.fsis.usda.gov/inspection/compliance-
guidance/labeling/labeling-policies/human-food-made-cultured-animal-cells (last visited Jan. 2, 2024). 
20
 Id. Hazard Analysis Critical Control Point is a management system that addresses food safety through the analysis and control of 
biological, chemical, and physical hazards from raw material production, procurement and handling, to manufacturing, distribution 
and consumption of the finished product. FDA, Hazard Analysis Critical Control Point (HACCP), 
https://www.fda.gov/food/guidance-regulation-food-and-dietary-supplements/hazard-analysis-critical-control-point-
haccp#:~:text=HACCP%20is%20a%20management%20system,consumption%20of%20the%20finished%20product. (last visited Dec. 
20, 2023).  
21
 Id. 
22
 See Labeling of Meat or Poultry Products Comprised of or Containing Cultured Animal Cells, 86 Fed. Reg. 49,491 (Sept. 3, 2021).   
23
 FSIS lists the countries, products, and establishments from those countries that are eligible to import to the U.S. on its website. 
USDA, Eligible Foreign Establishments, https://www.fsis.usda.gov/inspection/import-export/import-export-library/eligible-foreign-
establishments (last visited Jan. 2, 2024).  
24
 USDA, Human Food Made with Cultured Animal Cells, https://www.fsis.usda.gov/inspection/compliance-
guidance/labeling/labeling-policies/human-food-made-cultured-animal-cells (last visited Jan. 2, 2024). 
25
 Id. 
26
 Id. 
27
 FDA, Human Food Made with Cultured Animal Cells, https://www.fda.gov/food/food-ingredients-packaging/human-food-made-
cultured-animal-cells (last visited Jan. 2, 2024). 
28
 DACS, Division of Food Safety, https://www.fdacs.gov/Divisions-Offices/Food-Safety (last visited Jan. 2, 2024).  
29
 “Food establishment” means a factory, food outlet, or other facility manufacturing, processing, packing, holding, storing, or 
preparing food or selling food at wholesale or retail. Section 500.03(1)(o), F.S.  STORAGE NAME: h0435a.ACR 	PAGE: 5 
DATE: 1/19/2024 
  
DACS, as part of its responsibilities, can impose a variety of disciplinary actions against food 
establishments for specified violations.
30
 This includes, but is not limited to, revoking or suspending the 
permit of a food establishment
31
 or imposing Class II
32
 administrative fines.
33
 DACS, or its duly 
authorized agent, can also issue and enforce a stop-sale, stop-use, removal, or hold order if DACS or 
its agent finds that any food, food processing equipment, food processing area, or food storage area is 
in violation of the Florida Food Safety Act.
34
  
 
Effect of the Bill  
 
The bill defines “cultivated meat” to mean any meat or food product produced from cultured animal 
cells.  
 
The bill prohibits any person from manufacturing, selling, holding or offering for sale, or distributing 
cultivated meat in the state and specifies that a person who violates this prohibition commits a second-
degree misdemeanor.
35
 
 
The bill specifies that a food establishment that distributes or sells cultivated meat is subject to fines 
and revocation or suspension of the food establishment’s permit. Additionally, the bill specifies that the 
license of any restaurant, store, or other business may be suspended as provided for in the applicable 
licensing law upon the conviction of the owner or employee of that business for a violation in 
connection with that business. The bill further specifies that any cultivated meat products are subject to 
an immediate stop-sale order as well as embargo, detainment, or destruction. 
 
B. SECTION DIRECTORY: 
Section 1. Amends s. 500.03, F.S., related to definitions in the Florida Food Safety Act.  
 
Section 2. Creates s. 500.452, F.S., related to cultivated meat.  
 
Section 3. Provides an effective date of upon becoming a law.   
II.  FISCAL ANALYSIS & ECONOMIC IMPACT STATEMENT 
 
A. FISCAL IMPACT ON STATE GOVERNMENT: 
 
1. Revenues: 
None.  
 
2. Expenditures: 
The bill may have an indeterminate negative fiscal impact on DACS associated with enforcing the 
requirements of the bill.  
 
B. FISCAL IMPACT ON LOCAL GOVERNMENTS: 
 
1. Revenues: 
None.  
 
2. Expenditures: 
None. 
                                                
30
 Section 500.121(1), F.S. 
31
 Id.  
32
 The fine for each Class II violation cannot exceed $5,000. Section 570.971(1)(b), F.S.  
33
 Section 500.121(1), F.S. 
34
 Section 500.172(1), F.S. 
35
 A second-degree misdemeanor is punishable by up to 60 days in jail or a fine up to $500. Sections 775.082(4)(b), F.S. and 
775.083(1)(e), F.S.  STORAGE NAME: h0435a.ACR 	PAGE: 6 
DATE: 1/19/2024 
  
 
C. DIRECT ECONOMIC IMPACT ON PRIVATE SECTOR: 
None. 
 
D. FISCAL COMMENTS: 
None. 
III.  COMMENTS 
 
A. CONSTITUTIONAL ISSUES: 
 
 1. Applicability of Municipality/County Mandates Provision:  
    Not applicable. This bill does not appear to affect county or municipal governments.  
 2. Other: 
None.  
 
B. RULE-MAKING AUTHORITY: 
The bill authorizes DACS to adopt rules to implement the bill.  
 
C. DRAFTING ISSUES OR OTHER COMMENTS: 
None.  
IV.  AMENDMENTS/COMMITTEE SUBSTITUTE CHANGES 
None.