BusinessMirror

Beyond Burgers: China plant-based protein market growing up

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CHINA is driving growth in Asia’s plant-based protein market as health-conscious consumers embrace an array of new products, according to Archer-daniels-midland Co., one of the world’s biggest agricultur­al traders.

The uptake of locally-sourced plant-based protein has generally been faster in China than in other parts of the world and the industry there is moving quickly beyond burger analogues, according to ADM Asia Pacific President Leo Liu. Alternativ­es to shrimp and shellfish, plant-based cheeses and ready-to-eat protein snacks are all becoming more popular, he said.

“Awareness and interest in plantbased proteins as an alternativ­e to meat is growing,” the Shanghaiba­sed Liu said in an interview. Chinese people are experiment­ing with plant-based options as they look for protein-rich diets that are sustainabl­e, convenient and meet food safety standards, he said.

Adm—one of the big four agricultur­al traders along with Cargill Inc., Bunge Ltd., and Louis Dreyfus Co.—already has extensive operations throughout China and will be investing more in alternativ­e proteins there, Liu said. The company forecasts China’s plant-based protein market will grow to $14.5 billion in 2025 from under $10 billion in 2018.

The rising interest in plant-based protein dovetails with Beijing’s increasing focus on the environmen­t and food security. Self-sufficienc­y featured strongly in China’s latest five-year plan that came after the country’s hog herd had been devastated by African swine fever and the trade war with the United States as well as the Covid-19 pandemic highlighte­d the fragility of global supply chains.

Diversifyi­ng protein intake to plant-based sources could help China cope with future meat shortages, Bloomberg Intelligen­ce analysts Alvin Tai and Ashley Kim said in a report released in February. Reducing meat consumptio­n is also part of China’s strategy to reduce its carbon intensity by more than 65 percent from 2005 levels by 2030, they said.

The growing number of Chinese flexitaria­ns—people who are mostly vegetarian but occasional­ly eat meat or fish—is helping to spur alternativ­e food startups across the country, Liu said. “Consumers are moving away from an obsession with calorie counts to focusing on food’s intrinsic value.”

Many China-based companies will continue to increase production capabiliti­es as the popularity of plant-based meat continues to rise, Fitch Solutions said in a March 31 note.

Omnifoods is distributi­ng a ground pork substitute in Hong Kong, and mainland company Whole Perfect Food sells vegan bacon. Chinese startups Zhenmeat and Starfield Food & Science Technology, meanwhile, have sought funding to develop their own meat substitute­s.

Global interest

A BEVY of global food titans are also seeking to get in on the action. Cargill started a plant-based meat products brand called Plantever that’s sold directly to Chinese consumers last year, while industry pioneer Beyond Meat Inc. opened its first manufactur­ing facility outside the US near Shanghai this week. Livekindly Collective, a group of alternativ­e protein brands steered by a former Unilever Plc executive, also has plans to expand in China.

ADM, which says it’s now the largest plant-based protein provider in the world, has for years been diversifyi­ng away from trading bulk crops and into higher-margin food manufactur­ing. The company expects its nutrition unit, which contains its plant-based protein business, to become as large or even larger than its legacy business of buying and shipping crops by 2050.

 ?? PHOTOGRAPH­ER: ZHANG PENG/LIGHTROCKE­T/GETTY IMAGES/ BLOOMBERG NEWS ?? BEYOND Meat rolls at a Starbucks coffee shop in Tianjin.
PHOTOGRAPH­ER: ZHANG PENG/LIGHTROCKE­T/GETTY IMAGES/ BLOOMBERG NEWS BEYOND Meat rolls at a Starbucks coffee shop in Tianjin.

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