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Dr. Berg’s Healthy Keto and Intermittent Fasting Podcast

We Need to Eat Bugs & Insects to Save the Planet

Dr. Berg’s Healthy Keto and Intermittent Fasting Podcast

Dr. Eric Berg

Health & Fitness

4.61.6K Ratings

🗓️ 15 February 2024

⏱️ 4 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Are insects the sustainable food source of the future?


In this podcast, we’re going to take a look at edible bugs as an alternative protein source. Some say that we should be eating bugs by 2050 because of the growing population. Some blame climate change or claim that beef is not sustainable and that we need to find other sources of food.


One hundred grams of bugs contains about 12 grams of protein, 5 grams of fat, and 5 grams of carbs. If we were to eat insects as food, we’d need to eat 4x to 8x this amount to get enough protein! It could become quite expensive to consume this many bugs each day.


The cost of edible insects could be lowered by lowering the quality of what they’re fed, but then the bugs will be less nutritious with less protein. Eating insects would also require people to give up their cultural and traditional foods which is not likely.


When you compare bugs to beef, insects do not come close in terms of protein or nutritional value.


Insects also carry pathogens. A 2019 study evaluated several cricket farms that were developing edible insects. Around 81% of the crickets had parasites and 30% were potentially pathogenic. There's also a higher incidence of worms, viruses, bacteria, and fungus in crickets.


If you have an allergy to shellfish, you may also have an allergy to edible insects because they contain a similar protein.


Bugs have an exoskeleton mainly composed of chitin which is an antinutrient and can not be digested by our microbiome. Chitin also blocks vitamins A and E.


Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

Now someone had a question on one of my comments relating to bugs because a recent report says insects are the future of food.

0:08.5

Bugs for dinner.

0:09.5

18 and six?

0:11.0

They want us to all eat bugs by 2050 because of the rise of population

0:17.0

will be roughly about maybe 9 billion people on this planet so how are we

0:20.4

going to feed them? I mean everyone knows this fact because the climate change

0:23.6

and beef is not sustainable we need to find other sources of food. I like to say my life

0:29.4

mission is Sabrita Bug that tastes like bacon. And yes they even say the grass-fed

0:33.7

regenerative farming type agriculture needs to go because of all the cow burping

0:38.1

and the methane and what that does to the environment because that's the big problem.

0:41.8

And one of the big solutions would be the bugs because they're so high in protein and they're so

0:46.4

nutrient dense.

0:47.4

Well, let's do a little breakdown of this topic because if we take a hundred grams of these bugs in this hundred grams we have about

0:57.0

12 grams of actual protein and there's about five grams of fat five grams of carbs

1:02.2

little iron a little tiny bit of fat, of carbs,

1:02.6

little iron, a little tiny bit of fat.

1:04.9

But is 12 grams enough for our bodies?

1:07.8

Actually, no.

1:08.8

If we do the math and look at the actual number of crickets

1:11.4

that we're gonna have to eat to get close to this protein,

1:15.4

we're going to have to 4X that. That's a nice big bucket of crickets. But for a lot of people,

1:19.7

they're going to need to 8 times that figure every single day to get their protein

...

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