The New Zealand Herald

NZ plant-based foods could be ‘hero’ of menu

Future won’t come without a ‘mindset change’

- Jamie Morton

Nscience ew Zealand’s export markets might suffer if our industries don’t branch out into high-end, plant-based foods, a leading scientist says.

A fast-growing global “clean food” industry has already turned out new items like meat made from plant-protein, chicken and beef grown from self-producing cells, and chicken made from pea protein.

It wasn’t just “mock-meat” like the much-debated Impossible Burger on the menu, but a wider generation of foods that could combine the nutritiona­l power of plant proteins with the meat and dairy products we eat today.

Plant and Food Research’s science general manager Dr Jocelyn Eason spoke at the ProteinTEC­H conference in Auckland yesterday, an event looking at the opportunit­ies for New Zealand’s primary industries with technologi­cal advances in food production.

She told the Herald clean food products were “the hero” of tomorrow’s dinner plates.

“We envision these future food products to be 100 per cent plant-based, nutritious, sustainabl­e and entirely made in New Zealand,” she said.

“Although there are a number of challenges including flavour and texture, allergens, anti-nutritiona­l factors, plantbased foods can deliver good nutrition.

“Our challenge is in how we might develop new raw material streams from plants in such a way that we don’t strip out all of the vitamins, minerals and phytochemi­cals, some of which are not available from other food sources.”

The future she envisaged wouldn’t come without a “mindset change” in how the country produced food — and a mass shift in land use and new investment and infrastruc­ture. Dr Jocelyn Eason

“There may be a time lag to the introducti­on and use of novel foods, ingredient­s and technologi­es as extra work is needed to prove they are safe,” she said.

It was here that she saw a big role for Kiwi science. That included developing new ingredient­s isolated from plants which could be incorporat­ed into foods, and new processes that could isolate plant proteins while boosting nutritiona­l value.

Innovation was needed to form food protein structures, ensure they had an acceptable taste and texture, and deliver the finished product.

But recent advances in technology had allowed scientists to pinpoint potential ingredient­s and quantify their make-up.

This opened the door to scaling up these processes so they could be used in production.

Further, Eason said they wouldn’t need to involve introducin­g or even editing any genetic material, which remained heavily regulated by current New Zealand laws.

On the environmen­tal front, with lower water and nitrogen use, plant production could help New Zealand reach its aspiration to become carbon neutral by 2050.

“As a rough estimate, New Zealand has more than 1,737,000ha of land suitable for growing plant protein crops,” she said. “Consumers are also becoming more aware of the sustainabi­lity limit for animal foods and considerin­g the social impact of food production.” This was helping make plant-based foods more acceptable and economical­ly viable.

Failing to offer products that catered to “flexitaria­n” diets and had a greener focus might cause our export markets to decline, Eason warned. “The opportunit­y is for New Zealand to take experience­s from producing premium meats, dairy and fruits and harness them for a range of premium plant-based foods — foods that are healthy, taste, feel and smell good too.

“There are many challenges to develop these premium plant-based foods, but New Zealand is small, agile and innovative enough to do it.”

That said, she didn’t see the country assuming a role of feeding the world. “We cannot and should not compete on price against other countries that produce much bigger volumes at lower costs.

“We should, however, take advantage of our reputation for being a trusted food source to develop sustainabl­e, premium future foods for discerning customers in export markets without wrecking our environmen­t on the way.”

Yesterday’s conference follows a major paper in internatio­nal journal Science that found a shift from high meat to more plant-based diets could reduce global mortality rates by 6-10 per cent, while cutting global emissions and easing pressure on natural resources.

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US-based company Beyond Meat has come up with a burger made from pea protein.
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