Los Angeles Times

Impossible Foods aims at China pork

- Bloomberg

Impossible Foods Inc. is working to launch plantbased pork as it looks to enter China, the crown jewel of the $2.7-trillion global meat market.

“We already have very good prototypes of plant-based pork,” Chief Executive Pat Brown said in a Bloomberg TV interview at the China Internatio­nal Import Expo in Shanghai on Wednesday. “It’s really just a matter of commercial­izing and scaling that.”

With China accounting for 28% of the world’s meat consumptio­n, the Asian giant has “always been the most important country for our mission,” he said. His Redwood City, Calif., company is in discussion­s with potential local partners and Chinese government officials, he said.

A successful China entry would be a game changer for the nascent imitation meat market, which accounts for less than 1% of the global meat consumptio­n, but has the potential to reach 9% by 2040, according to Jefferies analyst Simon Powell. Impossible’s faux beef burgers are already served at Burger King and other restaurant­s in the U.S., while it’s seeking to sell in Europe.

Over 60% of Chinese consumers’ daily meat intake is pork, but an epidemic of African swine fever has forced widespread hog culling. Pork prices spiked nearly 70% in September, hurting household budgets.

“As a small company, we are not going to fill the void left by the African swine fever epidemic,” Brown said. “But this is an opportunit­y as people are going to realize how vulnerable animal-based food production is. It’s a real food security issue and we want to help China solve that.”

Brown said Chinese officials “are really committed to reducing their environmen­tal footprint.”

“Demand for meat exceeds by a factor of four what China can produce on its own land,” he said. “That’s why every time someone eats a steak in China, a little puff of smoke goes up in the Amazon.”

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