Well, I guess the main thing I'd say in response to all that is that I don't think it ought to be mandatory for anyone. There is no secret cabal planning to replace the world's food supply with Soylent. As a matter of fact, very few people are really touting it as a miracle cure for world hunger, and there'd be a lot of work to be done on that front if it's ever going to get there. It's certainly not a cost-effective strategy right now, nor is it supposed to be. Meanwhile, there are
other products you may want to tackle in the vein of fighting anti-starvation foods. Which, for some reason, seems like something you're intent on doing.
1) A couple of cups of powder, pre-reconstitution.
2) It has liquid ingredients, mostly oil, that are added at the time of reconstitution to the dry powder. They amount to a couple of tablespoons per day.
3) It's as stable as flour. It's about as hygroscopic, in my experience. It would not be stable in a silo - more likely you'd pack together sealed cubic packages inside crates, stored in a warehouse.
4) About 4 bucks a day, taking into account my experimentation with flavoring and such. Far from optimal, but still on the cheaper side of a nutritious diet in a Western country. EDIT: Keep in mind, economy of scale means it would be much better in the context we're talking about.
5) Less than we need for the meat industry, certainly, if you want to get into infrastructure.
All that said, I feel like this whole argument is based on a really dishonest premise. Soylent isn't
supposed to be a world hunger remedy. And it's
certainly sustainable compared to a lot of more natural food industries, such as meat. There's no problem in this vein that Soylent has that isn't
also shared with traditional food industries. Certainly, there's no reason you couldn't prepare the ingredients for Soylent as locally as you could farm anything else, so that's kind of a big non-sequitur. When you came into the thread, you were wondering why people would consume this stuff instead of other foods, and for almost all of us, this has nothing to do with that.
Maybe there are problems that Soylent doesn't solve. But you're acting as though it
creates those problems, when all we have is a product that isn't something it was never supposed to be.