Why Insect Farming Startups Are Going Bankrupt

Yves here. Most people would rather shift to more vegetable proteins than insects, even before getting to the fact that insect protein is pricey compared to that, meaning even too costly to use as animal feed. I wonder why that is hard to understand. I did eat grasshopper once, but it was pretty much cartilage, like eating a shrimp tail.

By Kenny Torrella, a senior reporter for Vox’s Future Perfect section, with a focus on animal welfare and the future of meat. Cross posted from Undark

The proclamation came from, of all people, an insect researcher: “We have to get used to the idea of eating insects.”

Dutch entomologist Marcel Dicke pitched eating bugs in his 2010 TED talk as critical to sustainably feeding a growing human population, because insects have a much smaller carbon footprint than beef, pork, and chicken.

To make his point, he even featured photographs of what might be a common meal in this bold new future: A stir fry with mealworm larvae, mushrooms, and snap peas, finished with a chocolate dessert topped with a large fried cricket

Three years later, the United Nations published a comprehensive report that echoed many of Dicke’s ideas and argued that insects could be a more eco-friendly food source not just for humans, but also for livestock. The report received widespread media coverage and helped to trigger a wave of investment from venture capital firms and governments alike into insect farming startups across Europe, the U.S., Canada, and beyond, totaling some $2 billion.

There’s a ring of truth, it turns out, to the conspiracy theory that the globalist elites want us to eat bugs.

This money was pouring into insect agriculture at a time when investors and policymakers were hungry for new models to fix the conventional meat industry’s massive carbon footprint. And what’s more disruptive and novel than farming and eating bugs?

You personally might recoil at the thought of eating fried crickets or roasted mealworms, but many cultures around the world consume insects, either caught from the wild or farmed on a small scale. And while grubs don’t feature prominently in current paleo cookbooks, our paleolithic ancestors most certainly ate plenty of bugs.

But the past decade has shown that even if you build an insect farm, the global market may not come. Of the 20 or so largest insect farming startups, almost a quarter have gone belly up in recent years, including the very largest, Ÿnsect, which ceased operations in December.

All told, shuttered insect farming startups account for almost half of all investment into the industry.

“Things have gone from bad to worse for the big insect factory business model,” one insect farming CEO said late last year in a YouTube video.

And Vox can exclusively report that plans to build a large insect farm in Nebraska — a joint project between Tyson Foods, America’s largest meat company, and Protix, now the world’s second largest insect farming company — are indefinitely on hold.

Beyond the financial woes of the insect farming industry, some philosophers worry about the ethical implications of potentially farming tens of trillions of bugs for food, as emerging research suggests insects may well have some form of consciousness and hold the capacity to feel pain and suffer.

“Evidence is building that there’s a form of sentience there in insects,” Jonathan Birch, a philosopher at the London School of Economics who leads the Foundations of Animal Sentience project at the university, told Vox last year.

But it looks like they may not have too much to worry about. In spite of the initial hype surrounding the bug farming boom, the insect agriculture industry has learned just how difficult it is to compete with the incumbent, larger animal-based meat industry — and that, perhaps, it never really made sense to try doing so with bugs.


Insect farming is similar to other types of animal farming. The insects reproduce, and the offspring are raised in large numbers in factory-style buildings. Many of the same welfare concerns for farmed chickens and pigs are present on insect farms, like disease, cannibalism, and painful slaughter. In the case of insects, the creatures are killed by a variety of means. They might be frozen, baked, roasted, shredded, grinded, microwaved, boiled, or suffocated.

In 2020, insect companies farmed an estimated one trillion bugs, and the most commonly farmed species today are black soldier fly larvae, mealworms, and crickets.

While some people might tell researchers they’re open to adding bugs to their diet, these smallest of animals remain a novelty food in the U.S. and Europe, as opposed to a commodity capable of displacing wings or burgers.

“The human food market, basically, has not materialized,” Dustin Crummett, a philosopher and executive director of The Insect Institute — a nonprofit that researches the environmental and animal welfare implications of large-scale insect agriculture — said in an interview. “Only a tiny fraction of farmed insects are used for human food.”

But insect farming startups haven’t only sought to put insects on our plates or grind them into protein bars; many want to sell insect meal (ground up insects) as feed for other farmed animals. It’s a sustainable alternative, they argue, to the soy fed to factory-farmed chickens and cattle, much of which is grown on deforested land. Insect meal could also replace fishmeal (largely composed of small, wild-caught species, like anchovies and sardines), which is fed to farmed fish and heavily contributes to overfishing.

This approach of farming insects for livestock feed, however, isn’t materializing either, and much of it comes down to cost.

According to a 2024 analysis published in the journal “Food and Humanity” and co-authored by Crummett, one ton of insect meal costs about 10 times that of soybean meal and 3.5 times that of fishmeal, a major cost gap that is unlikely to narrow anytime soon.

Insect meal is so expensive, in part, because feeding insects is expensive.

Farmed insects are typically fed agricultural “co-products” — like wheat bran and corn gluten — most of which is already fed to livestock, and so insect farmers have wound up in competition with big meat companies to buy up these ingredients. This simple fact weakens the narrative often driven by insect farming startups that they are putting food scraps that otherwise would’ve been thrown away to good use.

“Organic waste from the industry becomes feed for insects,” Protix’s website reads. “This circular food production mirrors nature’s circle of life.” But this is misleading; Protix feeds its insects ingredients like oat husk and starch, which are typically used in traditional livestock feed anyway.

“It doesn’t really make sense to buy chicken feed to feed insects to feed to chicken,” as one insect farming startup founder told AgriTech Insights a couple of years ago.

And it’s not guaranteed that insect meal will be more sustainable than soy or fishmeal. According to a UK government report, the environmental impact of insect farming depends on a number of factors, including what insects are fed and whether startups power their farms with fossil fuels or renewable energy.

Energy usage explains a lot of the industry’s cost challenge. Farmed insects require warm temperatures, and in Europe, where so many of the startups are based, energy prices have sharply risen in recent years.

To lower costs and develop new revenue streams, some insect farming startups have pivoted to become “waste management” companies, too. Rotting food waste in landfills is a huge source of global greenhouse gas emissions, and insect farming companies can earn money by taking it off other companies’ hands and letting bugs eat it.

But here, too, the industry has run into obstacles, including strict EU regulations around what can be fed to insects and an inconsistent product. When insects are fed food waste, their final nutritional profile can vary widely depending on what they’re fed, but livestock feed companies need nutritional consistency.

And it turns out that even the largest and most powerful companies in the space can run into hard, economic realities when trying to rear bugs on waste en masse.


In late 2023, America’s biggest meat company, Tyson Foods, announced it had invested an undisclosed sum of money in Protix, a large Dutch insect farming startup. That Tyson was putting its weight behind it seemed like much-needed proof that insects could be the future of food, as so many startups, investors, and researchers had claimed.

The two companies planned to build a massive insect farm together near Tyson’s cattle slaughterhouse in Dakota City, Nebraska. At the insect farm, Protix would raise and kill around 70,000 tons of larvae annually — approximately 300 billion individual insects. The bugs would feed on cattle paunch, partially digested plant matter removed from the stomachs of cattle slaughtered at Tyson’s plant. After a few weeks of feeding on the animal waste, the larvae would be slaughtered and ground up into insect meal, destined to become food for pets and livestock.

It was a way for Tyson to “derive value” from its waste, as it told CNN.

Now, Vox can exclusively report that Tyson Foods has withdrawn its air permit application to build the plant, and the plant itself is “on hold indefinitely.” That’s according to email exchanges last December between Tyson Foods and the Nebraska Department of Water, Energy, and Environment, which were obtained through public records requests by the nonprofit Society for the Protection of Insects.

Tyson and Protix did not respond to questions for this story.

The companies’ stalled plans aren’t unique in the insect farming space.

In early 2024, Innovafeed — currently the largest insect farming startup — opened a pilot plant in Decatur, Illinois, in partnership with ADM, the massive food and livestock feed manufacturing company. The U.S. Department of Agriculture awarded Innovafeed a $11.7 million grant to turn insect waste into fertilizer at the plant, but a year and a half after it opened, it suspended operations, citing funding challenges.

Through a public records request, Society for the Protection of Insects obtained over 600 pages of documents pertaining to the grant, though about half of it is redacted, including much of the environmental review and Innovafeed’s commercial records. Earlier this month, the organization sued the USDA over the heavy redactions, arguing it’s in the public’s interest to fully disclose the details of the deal.

The USDA declined to comment on pending litigation, and Innovafeed did not respond to questions for this story.

The biggest blow to the industry yet came late last year when the largest startup of them all — France-based Ÿnsect, which had raised over $600 million, representing nearly a full third of the sector’s funding — ran out of money. And a quarter of that backing had come from the French government. A recent whistleblower investigation alleged severe mismanagement at Ÿnsect’s production facility that led to filthy conditions and health problems for workers. The company didn’t respond to a request for comment.


As insect farming startups struggle to stay afloat, their main trade group — the International Platform of Insects for Food and Feed, or IPIFF — is going so far as to call on the European Union to mandate publicly funded food services, like school cafeterias, to buy insect meat and publicly owned farms to buy insect meal to feed to their animals. IPIFF didn’t respond to an interview request for this story, nor did the North American Coalition for Insect Agriculture.

As for the outlook of the insect farming sector, more startups will probably go under in the years ahead, and for the survivors to continue on, they may need to leave Europe and North America for warmer climates and lower operating costs.

But the rise, fall, and resettling of the industry isn’t uncommon in the agricultural technology field, Crummett says. Vertical farming, for example, seemed like a great idea on paper, but it’s been an economic failure.

“It is not at all unusual that some new thing gets hyped as the silver bullet that’s going to solve such and such environmental problem,” Crummett said, especially when it’s a striking idea — eating insects — and is backed by influential institutional actors, like the United Nations and university researchers.

But it’s undeniable that the insect agriculture sector’s ambitions have fallen far from disrupting the meat and livestock feed supply to a future in smaller niche markets, like pet foodnovelty human foods, waste management, and livestock feed additives.


It all amounts to a massive retrenchment from its ambitious goals of revolutionizing the food system to now merely tinkering at its edges.

But in another way, it was never truly ambitious enough. Decades of environmental and food systems research has concluded that what we ultimately need is fewer animals — be them chickens; pigs; birds; fishes; or, yes, bugs — in farms and on our plates.

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22 comments

  1. IdahoSpud

    While it’s true that eating insects in many cultures is normal and acceptable, this is not the case in the west. Most westerners recoil in disgust at the notion of eating bugs.

    As such, that makes this idea of wholescale introduction of expensive insect proteins into the western diet little more than a humiliation ritual – like forcing pork into the diet of a Muslim.

    Also, whilst the proles eat Soylent Green, er insect proteins, what sort of meals would be served at the next WEF conference?

    1. lyman alpha blob

      I ate a live ant when I was four years old. It was very bitter. Haven’t been much interested in ingesting invertebrates since.

      But if there are people who would eat insects and yet these companies can’t sustain a profit, perhaps the problem is “the big insect factory business model”. We can’t seem to do anything these days unless someone gets to be an instant squillionaire.

      Of course the real answer is fewer people on the planet making do with less. I have not been to Asia, but I do eat a lot of Asian food in the US and the pattern seems to be a lot of veggies and rice with smaller bites of meat mixed in for non-vegetarian dishes, which I quite like.

      1. hk

        Sorry about getting off on a tangent, but I hear about this alleged mostly vegetarian Asian a lot, but I don’t think I ever met too many of them. The Koreans love their beef and chicken. The Chinese love their pork. At least in Northeast Asia, per capita meat consumption is no less than that of Europe, although not quite at the level of US Now, these, admittedly are a fairly recent phenomenon–mostly because meat was too expensive just 50 years ago in these countries, but eating meat was always considered a good thing, a sign of prosperity, and once Asians started getting rich enough, they took on meat eating with vengeance. I always thought of this idea of Asians favoring vegetables as a small example of Orientalism, of the (nonexistent) magical East Asian.

  2. Trees&Trunks

    When living in Mexico we had crickets every now and then. We never really picked up a habit to eat them because they were too sour also not so crunchy, but rather mushy.
    In Zambia I tried to eat some caterpillars but they just looked too horrible.
    Not against eating bugs but aesthetics and texture is important. When the globalists wants me to “eat zee bags”, then I am very much against it, because I know they are out to hurt me.

    1. hereweare

      Maybe your Mexican crickets were a different species or cooked differently, but I’ve had yummy south-east Asian crickets. I say they taste of roasted peanuts without the peanut, and Western tourists I’ve encouraged to try some usually agree after initial hesitation, and order another plateful.

  3. Redolent

    the human stomach as a adaptive organ, and here it is the focus of novel inputs…and potential profit. The bug appears to be the entropic nature of ‘the willing’….when the existing factory model…makes the greater sense

  4. Chris

    “The human food market, basically, has not materialized,”

    What an unfortunate turn of phrase.

  5. lone plateau

    Check out the book Man Eating Bugs if, for nothing else the great cover photo. It gives an overview of bug eating around the world. Whenever a copy came through the used book store, I would always put it in the display window. Sold in hours.

  6. jrkrideau

    It strikes me that building some huge insect raising installation before you have a decent established market is not exactly good business practice. I can see a market for insects as both human and animal food developing in the West with time and patience and a lot of encouragement but it would likely take decades unless the idea goes viral on TicToc.

    I’d expect we would need to see smaller producers and niche markets long before we would see large sales. We might even need more immigration from countries where insects are a standard part of the diet.

    1. Widening Gyre

      “Go big or go home” drastically underestimates my willingness to just go home (and not eat bugs). Literally my only goal most of the time.

  7. ambrit

    Sorry to throw some shade on this subject, but bugs are the feature. Did the “Buggy Cuisine” entrepreneurs create the business model that the AI industry is following?

  8. The Rev Kev

    I can easily see how bugs are eaten in some cultures but I suspect that the bugs grown in these industrial bug farms would not be the same and would have no taste – just like those strawberries grown in those vertical farms that was in Links the other day.

  9. AG

    Thanks for the post.
    In Germ-ania it´s almost as if you were forced to welcome this woke Starship Trooper-cuisine notion for a while, coz anything for “da climate”. And bugs being mostly known to us from da 3rd world, it was almost a racist insult to doubt eating them.
    This has abated by now.
    Thanks to the harsh realities of economic downfall.
    Everything has a bride side apparently.

  10. Alan Sutton

    As if worries about “insect sentience” would ever prevent humans from eating or exploiting insects!

    I thought that concern was ludicrous given the many brutalities we already allow to be done to mammals like pigs or cows.

  11. Matthew G. Saroff

    Insect farms cannot compete with subsidized agriculture.

    The cattle farmers are subsidized, the feed producers are subsidized, the meat markets are subsidized, etc.

    1. Uwe Ohse

      True, but… why are insect farms not subsidized? Because they have no lobby (questionable, as insect farms were pushed by the green/climate lobby), or because almost no one believes that they will be successful in those parts of the world where insect eating isn’t done?
      Subsidization will not help against cultural idiosyncrasy.

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