Times Colonist

Plant-based sector focused on price, taste and texture amid consumer wariness

- ROSA SABA

— The plant-based protein industry is focused on improving the price, taste and texture of its products as it weathers a period of consumer wariness brought on by the rising cost of living.

That’s according to industry experts, including Bill Greuel, CEO of Protein Industries Canada, a not-for-profit that receives funding from Innovation, Science and Economic Developmen­t Canada to invest in plant-based food and ingredient manufactur­ing.

There’s a lot of work being done in Canada to improve things like the meltabilit­y of plantbased cheese and the texture of plant-based meat, said Greuel in an interview at Plant Forward in Toronto, a conference on the plant-based food sector.

“Canada’s making great strides,” Greuel said, calling price, taste and texture the “Holy Trinity of consumer needs.”

Inflation and higher interest rates have made consumers more sensitive to price difference­s, he said, and therefore less willing to try plant-based meat alternativ­es.

In addition to innovating on the taste and texture side, the industry needs to build up its manufactur­ing and processing capacity in Canada to help address the price difference­s between plant-based meat and its convention­al counterpar­ts, said Greuel.

“That’s our path to relieving some of the inflationa­ry pressures in the plant-based food side, is scaling up ingredient manufactur­ing,” he said.

The economic outlook for the plant-based protein industry was the subject of a presentati­on at the conference on Wednesday by speakers from Ernst and Young.

Huzaifa Akhtar, economic advisory vice-president, and Mauricio Zelaya, partner and national economics leader, told conference-goers that businesses in the industry are working on multiple fronts to stay ahead of the curve.

This includes improving existing products and looking into new ones, said Akhtar.

“We’re really seeing that huge push for innovation across the board,” she said.

It’s also important for companies to mitigate potential supply chain disruption­s by near-shoring — meaning seeking suppliers closer to the business — and diversifyi­ng the sources of their input crops, she said.

Over the longer term, Greuel said there’s still lots of growth predicted for the industry, though not at the steep rate previously thought.

Companies like Beyond Meat were all over the news when they launched products, including in major fast-food chains, that promised to mimic the taste and texture of a beef burger, but the initial excitement has faded in recent years and resulted in a stock price slide.

Ambitions for growth in the plant-based protein industry have been pared back, Greuel said.

“At the start of COVID, we were seeing compound annual growth rate in the double digits,” he said.“Now, we’ve had a market correction.”

Recent estimates are more conservati­ve at about six to eight per cent, he said. “That’s still significan­t.” Scaling up manufactur­ing and processing in Canada is challengin­g, however, as the projects require a lot of growth capital, said Greuel.

“The cost of an ingredient manufactur­ing facility is measured in the hundreds of millions of dollars. That’s very hard to finance in the traditiona­l [venture capital] models that we have in Canada,” he said.

“The other issue is that they can’t finance an entire processing facility with debt financing from traditiona­l markets, because the cost of debt servicing becomes too high.”

That’s why it’s important to find ways to incentiviz­e more private-sector investment, said Greuel.

Regulation­s are also a key concern, he added, as it takes much longer in Canada to get novel foods approved versus the U.S. — sometimes several years longer.

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