Revue Française de la recherche
en viandes et produits carnés

ISSN  2555-8560

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DERNIERS ARTICLES PARUS

Abstracts - Process et Technologies

The posters associated with this session displayed on the first two days of the joint EAAP/WAAP congress presented the latest scientific research on grading methods of beef, lamb and pork carcasses. Studies conducted on three continents show a craze in the meat industry for the use of innovative methods for predicting carcass quality. The results of these studies demonstrate a high potential for determining carcass characteristics to help the meat industry address issues such as predictions of carcass yield, composition and quality. The use of these prediction tools can guide the creation of quality assured supply chains and allow the industry to meet the needs of consumers at the center of attention.

This session presented at the recent combined EAAP/WAAP in Lyon described research on carcase grading to predict the true carcase value which is a product of eating quality of the cuts sold (determining price/kg) and lean meat yield determining the amount of meat sold. The results clearly show that it is possible to develop more sophisticated commercial grading systems underpinning true carcase value by using both traditional and new carcase grading technologies, importantly linked to the prediction of eating quality using untrained consumer based sensory testing. The new grading technologies based on X-ray and vision-based devices combined with rigorous statistical analysis, will lead to improved accuracies and precision. Even new traits like chemically measured intramuscular fat may replace human based visual grading of marbling. This will also facilitate carcase traits to be routinely used to underpin commercial genetic evaluation programmes.

The livestock industry in China is experiencing a notable shift towards quality and sustainability, driven by globally collaborative efforts and research advancements. This article, which is a compilation of the work presented at the EAAP congress (session 30), provides an overview of key topics in the meat industry of China, France and Australia. Ranging from the quality assessment and sustainable development of the meat field through triangular cooperation, to the quality characteristics and regulation of meat and meat production. Additionally, it explores consumer perceptions and factors affecting sensory appeal, as well as marbling evaluation in French bovines. Furthermore, it delves into the intricate relationship between nutrition, metabolism, and the efficiency of beef and lamb production. Through a collection of research findings, this article highlights the multifaceted landscape of China's livestock industry and the evolving factors influencing its growth.

The beef industry is structured by two types of consumption: everyday purchases oriented towards economical products in tender portions, often processed (such as chopped steak) and pleasure purchases oriented towards a search for gustatory pleasure and the satisfaction of societal and environmental criteria.
However, it is difficult for the industry to guarantee regular and homogeneous products to satisfy consumers. These inadequacies stem from the current carcass grading systems. Thus, the professionals we met appear to be in favor of a change in the grading system based on a sensory quality prediction system that could be inspired by foreign systems such as "Meat Standards Australia" for butchered cuts. Such a system, through its segmentation, could meet the expectations of both types of consumption, daily and pleasure, allowing to generate an added value for the whole sector as it is the case in Australia. However, the diversity of organizations with sometimes divergent interests makes it very unlikely, in the short term, to set up a prediction system on a sector-wide scale. Thus, the implementation of a carcass prediction system would more likely be the result of an individual initiative. The links where an individual initiative is most likely are, on the one hand, mass distribution for which the triggering lever lies in the dissemination of knowledge and, on the other hand, meat companies independent of livestock farming that wish to ensure a regular and qualitative supply. In addition, economic, operational, political and knowledge barriers make it unlikely that a sensory quality prediction system for beef will be developed collectively or by the upstream sector. However, a low probability exists, depending on the perception of a possible socio-economic opportunity by an innovative organization or on the evolution of European regulations.

In the last 40 years, the French bovine meat value chain improved bovine carcass performances, reducing the amount of adipose tissue and therefore marbling of meat. The importance of fat infiltration in meat for organoleptic quality has been once again recently proved. Thus, marbling is a research axis of INTERBEV (the French bovine meat interbranch organisation) in order to improve meat quality for consumers. Nevertheless, rearing factors impacting marbling level in meat have been poorly studied in France. The objective of this review is to identify breeding factors linked to animal or feeding which could enhance marbling level of bovine meat.

Today, it is important to make research results accessible to the public in a simple and understandable way. This objective is at the origin of the Open Science movement. This movement uses many tools available on the internet, publications and data available through open access or partnerships between scientists and actors of society. The meat dictionary first developed by the Meat Academy, served as a source for the creation of a specific thesaurus on meat and which could be useful to different actors of the sector, including consumers. The Meat Thesaurus contains 1505 concepts that describe the different facets of the meat sector such as the market and commercialization of meat, slaughtering, culinary preparations, etc. The creation of the thesaurus was done by a pluridisciplinary team including experts in web semantics, meat biology and experts of meat vocabulary. This thesaurus has several advantages. First, it may be used to help index articles, review articles and data sets, making their consultation by professionals, consumers, scientists or journalists easier. It may also be used as a basis for building an ontology, which is a formal description of knowledge in a field that will be used to reason from data. The thesaurus will also allow enriching other vocabulary to introduce new knowledge, like for example French specificities of meat cutting or terms and definitions.

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Edito

Le paradoxe de la filière bovine

Les signaux d’alerte se multiplient sur les conséquences à long terme du mouvement de décapitalisation bovine qui s’accélère depuis trois ans. Selon des projections réalisées par l’Institut de l’Élevage présentées lors des Matinales de la Recherche d’Interbev en mars dernier (nous y reviendrons dans un prochain numéro), la diminution du troupeau entrainerait une forte régression du nombre d’animaux finis destinés au marché français. Cette baisse est évaluée à environ -20% entre 2022 et 2030, soit 12 500 animaux de moins par semaine, avec la fermeture prévisible de nombreux outils et une baisse du besoin en emplois dans la filière.
Le paradoxe de la situation actuelle, c’est que les perspectives d’évolutions de la consommation ne justifient en rien une telle perspective. Certes, la consommation apparente de viande bovine en France a connu depuis dix ans une baisse lente, mais régulière, d’environ 1,1% par an selon Agreste, rappelle une étude menée par Valérie Diot (Ifip) sur "Les déterminants impactant les évolutions de la consommation des produits carnés en France". Mais son article, que nous publions dans ce numéro de VPC avec l’aimable autorisation du RMT Maele, montre également que les produits animaux "demeurent des produits piliers ancrés dans le quotidien des consommateurs avec des taux de pénétration élevés" et que la baisse de consommation des dernières années est en grande partie liée à des considérations économiques.
Par ailleurs, contrairement à une opinion trop communément répandue, les perspectives d’évolution de la consommation de viande bovine au niveau mondial à moyen terme sont bel et bien positives. C’est ce qui ressort du rapport Perspectives agricoles 2025-2034 OCDE-FAO dont nous vous proposons dans ce numéro une synthèse centrée sur les produits carnés. Selon les projections à moyen terme des deux organisations, la consommation mondiale de viande devrait progresser de 47,9 Mt au cours de la prochaine décennie soit une augmentation de 0,9 kg par habitant et par an en équivalent poids comestible au détail (epd). Si la consommation de volaille progresserait le plus rapidement (+21%), celle de viande bovine devrait tout de même croitre de +13% d’ici 2034 !
La filière viande bovine française n’a donc pas de raison de se résigner au déclin. Les deux événements professionnels du secteur entre lesquels intervient la publication de ce numéro de VPC démontrent d’ailleurs l’importance économique intacte de l’élevage bovin. En septembre, le Space de Rennes a dépassé tous les records d’affluence avec 102 000 visiteurs sur trois jours. Quant au Sommet de l’Elevage qui ouvre ses portes du 7 au 10 octobre à Clermont-Ferrand, il n’attend pas moins de 1750 exposants pour 120000 visiteurs ! Parmi ceux-ci, une délégation chinoise est attendue. Dans ce cadre, VPC publie le compte-rendu du Forum franco-chinois sur la production de viande bovine qui s’est tenu à Changchun en juillet dernier avec des experts français sur place.
A lire aussi dans ce numéro, une revue systématique et une méta-analyse d'essais contrôlés randomisés sur "Consommation de viande bovine et facteurs de risque des maladies cardiovasculaires" ; et une étude en deux volets sur la compétitivité de cinq filières porcines européennes en 2022.

Bruno CARLHIAN et Jean-François HOCQUETTE