Bristol Post

Fifth of supermarke­t ready meals are now plant-based

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A FIFTH of ready meals sold by UK supermarke­ts are now plant-based or vegetarian and are the cheapest option at the majority of retailers, according to a survey.

Among the ready meal category, plantbased options are the fastest growing, up by 92% since the Eating Better alliance’s first survey in 2018.

The organisati­on named Aldi and Tesco as its two best performers for increasing their plant-based options by 175% and 103% respective­ly after surveying 2,743 ready meals across 10 UK supermarke­ts.

Tesco and the Co-op have significan­tly reduced their meat-based, ready meal ranges but Asda, Morrisons and Sainsbury’s “continue to have very meaty ranges”, while Iceland’s range remains at its 2018 level of 85% meatbased, the report said.

According to the latest research by Mintel, 86% of UK adults eat ready meals, with three in 10 people eating chilled ready meals at least once a week.

The study also found plant-based ready meals are cheaper per portion than meat meals at seven out of 10 chains.

The alliance said the Co-op was one supermarke­t to have significan­tly altered its pricing, with meat-based meals going from being 8% cheaper than its plantbased options last year to the opposite this year, with meat meals now 9% more expensive than plant-based.

Overall, the survey found a 50% increase in plant-based and vegetarian meals since 2018, with one in five ready meals on offer now plant-based or vegetarian.

The amount of cheese in vegetarian meals is also down a third in three years to 62%.

Simon Billing, executive director at Eating Better, said: “Retailers influence how and what we eat and have a responsibi­lity to help us make healthy and sustainabl­e food choices.

“Climate-friendly food needs to be mainstream and shouldn’t cost more, so it’s good to see progress on choice and affordabil­ity.

“Now, we need the same drive on meat options, to make up no more than 50% of the ready-meals ranges at all retailers.”

Food Foundation charity executive director, Anna Taylor, said: “This year’s survey from Eating Better shows some encouragin­g progress being made by the retailers, although there’s certainly a lot more that can be done.

“While it’s good to see the price of plantbased ready meals come down, the high proportion of meals containing meat remains a cause for concern given their negative impacts on both health and the environmen­t.”

Climate-friendly food needs to be mainstream and shouldn’t cost more, so it’s good to see progress on choice and affordabil­ity

Simon Billing

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