Insect proteins have been authorized by the European Union in fish, poultry, pig and domestic animal feed, where they are establishing themselves as a regular component. Protein raw materials for traditional feed, such as soybean meal and meat and fish by-products, are increasingly less sustainable and competing with direct human use. The European Commission has said insects could replace soya-based animal feed, helping to slow deforestation, or even provide an alternative source of protein for humans. Studies show that insects can provide the same amount of protein as livestock using only 10% [1] of the land and producing only 1% of the emissions [2].
In 2021, the European Union approved feeding insect proteins to chickens and pigs [3], a practice already permitted for farmed fish. And it has since pioneered the sale of yellow worms, migratory locusts and house crickets to humans, to be eaten whole or reduced to protein for pasta, granola bars and other foods [4]. As regulatory hurdles fall, dozens of startups in Europe are betting on a growing market for edible insects. By 2030, European companies will produce 1 million tonnes [5] of insect-based animal feed every year, and 390 million Europeans [6] will munch on some form of insect-based food. The breeding of edible insects for zootechnical use, for pet food and for human consumption represents a choice of environmental sustainability, both in comparison with other animal protein productions and because, for the growth of the larvae, organic waste and by-products are used , thus reducing waste production and food waste to the benefit of the circular economy.
Since the beginning of the third millennium, the role of insects has been invested with new potential and meanings of an economic, social and aesthetic nature: Millennium Bugs tells the Italian experiments linked to the use of insects as a new protein source for feed and the ongoing research to produce food for human use recently approved by the European Union.