The Niagara Falls Review

Is McDonald’s shaking off the damaging Beyond Meat baggage?

- SYLVAIN CHARLEBOIS Dr. Sylvain Charlebois is senior director of the agri-food analytics lab and a professor in food distributi­on and policy at Dalhousie University. Troy Media

One of the most bizarre food stories of the year is this quasi-divorce between McDonald’s and Beyond Meat.

When McDonald’s Restaurant­s recently announced its new McPlant products will be rolled out in 2021, Beyond Meat working with the fast-food chain, wasn’t even mentioned.

Beyond Meat insists it’s still working with McDonald’s but few seem to know what its role is. It seems McDonald’s broke up with Beyond Meat but forgot to tell the plant-based giant.

In September 2019, McDonald’s internatio­nal leaders chose to run a pilot with its P.L.T. in more than 40 restaurant­s in southern Ontario. P.L.T. (plant, lettuce, tomatoes) was co-designed with Beyond Meat.

The pilot was extended to April 2020 but once it ended, there was no announceme­nt, no tweet, nothing. Not one drop of news — until last week.

McDonald’s claimed the plant-based burger received a positive response from Canadians. But when COVID-19 hit, one can only suspect the company got busy focusing on other things. Many even wondered whether the growing excitement around a plant-based diet would survive the pandemic. We now know it has. And that’s how McPlant was born (however questionab­le the name may be).

Beyond Meat is adamant that it’s still working with McDonald’s on various projects. But chances are that Beyond Meat is out and McDonald’s is moving forward with its own agenda.

McDonald’s has a massive network of over 38,000 restaurant­s, much too big for Beyond Meat to supply. Few will be surprised to see McDonald’s integrate vertically to support a new line of products. McPlant will require supply chain alignment and changes in how outlets operate. For example, to do it right, regular patties can’t be cooked alongside McPlant patties.

Beyond Meat has been around for more than a decade, but only got global attention a couple of years ago. As a dominant player in the field, Beyond Meat already has a past. Many will link the plant-based movement to Beyond Meat. Its “better than beef” rhetoric has hurt the brand and the category.

The reality is most Canadians still enjoy traditiona­l animal proteins. Expecting Canadians to replace one with the other is unreasonab­le. When terms like “fake meat” and “manufactur­ed meat” are mentioned, the first company that comes to mind is Beyond Meat. This is its baggage and McDonald’s knows it.

McDonald’s is now fully committed to offering plant-based foods. As other chains have done, the company is making its menu more inclusive. Consuming vegetable proteins is much more socially normalized now and the pandemic hasn’t really changed anything.

Not offering plant-based options could lead many to pass on McDonald’s.

So dietary inclusiven­ess is the way to go and that’s a good call by McDonald’s.

For McDonald’s Canada, specifical­ly, it will be interestin­g how the scenario unfolds. The company has always been one of Canada’s most formidable champions of agricultur­e. McPlant could be seen as a betrayal, especially for beef producers. So don’t be surprised if you see more McDonald’s ads promoting sustainabl­e Canadian beef.

It’s all about playing nice with farmers and there’s nothing wrong with that. But it’s clear Beyond Meat no longer has McDonald’s as an ally. So it may need to refine its value propositio­n to consumers.

Plant-based menus are about more choice, not about underminin­g the hard work of farmers who have provided us with quality meat products for decades.

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