
More People Are Cloning Their Pets Despite the Cost
ViaGen, a Texas-based firm that purchased the intellectual property to cloning technology in 1998, is in the business of helping individuals and families clone their pets. But it wasn’t always that way. ViaGen originally aimed to improve livestock breeding by “bypassing the genetic lottery” that produces high-value bulls and other animals, to a new feature by the BBC.

Dolly the sheep. (Photo: Toni Barros/Wikimedia Commons)
ViaGen’s total number of cloned pets is said to be in the hundreds, though the company won’t disclose exactly how many animals it’s produced. “It has grown so much since we first started this, and we’re cloning more and more pets every year,” a client services manager at ViaGen told the BBC. “We’ve got puppies being born every week.” But if pet cloning hasn’t been floating toward the top of your consciousness for a while, there’s a reason for that: “We don’t do a lot of advertising, a lot of it is passed on by word of mouth.”
ViaGen (and similar cloning firms, like Sooam Biotech in South Korea and Sinogene in China) performs its cloning procedure by injecting a cell nucleus from the initial animal into a donor egg whose genetic material has been removed. The firm then grows the egg into an embryo until that embryo can be safely planted into the womb of a surrogate parent. The result is an identical genetic twin, despite an actual age difference of up to several decades.
Even are hopping onto the pet cloning bandwagon (though this comes as no surprise, given that they’re the ones who can easily afford to do so). Diane von Furstenburg and Barry Diller controversially had their late dog Shannon cloned back in 2016, while Barbra Streisand used Viagen to produce two clones of her late dog Samantha two years later. TV personality Simon Cowell has also expressed interest in cloning his pups, though that was back in 2019, with no news on the subject since.
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