The Morning Call

Tyson enters plant-based meat market with nuggets

- By Dee-Ann Durbin

The fast-growing market for meat alternativ­es has a surprising new player: Tyson Foods.

Tyson, one of the world’s largest meat producers, will begin selling nuggets made from pea protein at grocery stores this summer. A blended burger made from beef and pea protein will follow this fall. Both will be sold under a new brand, Raised and Rooted, which will continue to develop plant-based and blended products for both groceries and restaurant­s.

Tyson is responding to a growing global trend toward plant-based eating, fueled by health and environmen­tal concerns. U.S. sales of meat substitute­s are expected to jump 78% to $2.5 billion between 2018 and 2023, according to Euromonito­r. Global sales could reach $23 billion in that same time frame.

Startups such as Beyond Meat, which makes burgers and sausages from pea protein, and Impossible Foods, which has a soy-based formula, have also raised consumers’ interest with products that mimic meat so closely in taste and texture that they’re being sold at Burger King and Carl’s Jr.

But the entry of Springdale, Arkansas-based Tyson could upend the alternativ­e protein market because of its sheer size and distributi­on capacity. Tyson Foods reported $40 billion in sales in its 2018 fiscal year; Beyond Meat, which held its IPO last month, forecasts $210 million in sales this year. Tyson has 50 facilities just for processing chicken; Impossible Foods has one factory in Silicon Valley.

Tyson has been watching the alternativ­e protein market for a while. Its investment arm, Tyson Ventures, acquired a 5% stake in Beyond Meat in 2016. It sold that stake before Beyond Meat’s IPO, but it continues to hold investment­s in other startups, including Memphis Meats and Future Meat Technologi­es — which grow meat from cells — and mushroom-based protein startup MycoTechno­logy.

“These things work together and help us have a broad view of what the world of food looks like,” said Justin Whitmore, who leads Tyson’s alternativ­e protein business.

Whitmore said the company noticed a significan­t upswing in the number of consumers who eat meat but want alternativ­e sources of protein. About a year ago, Tyson’s chefs and consumer specialist­s began developing its own alternativ­e protein products. The nuggets it came up with look like fried chicken, but they’re made with pea protein, egg whites, flaxseed and bamboo fiber and other ingredient­s.

“It became apparent we had the capability not only to compete but to lead in this space,” Whitmore said.

Whitmore said Tyson will develop more Raised and Rooted products and also spread plantbased alternativ­es through its other brands. For example, Tyson’s existing Aidells brand is getting sausage and meatballs that contain 50-60% chicken and 40-50% plants like chickpeas, quinoa and lentils.

The products will be sold at grocery stores and restaurant­s, but Tyson isn’t yet saying which ones. One Tyson customer, McDonald’s, has yet to say whether it will add a plant-based burger to its U.S. menu. It sells one made by Nestle in Germany.

Nestle is among the companies that could challenge Tyson. Last week, the Swiss food giant said it plans to launch its Sweet Earth brand Awesome Burger in the U.S. this fall. And earlier this week, Maryland-based chicken company Perdue Farms said it will soon start selling nuggets, tenders and patties made from a blend of chicken and vegetables.

Maple Leaf Foods, a big Canadian meat company, also sells plant-based alternativ­es under its Lightlife brand, which it acquired in 2017.

But Whitmore didn’t express concern about competitor­s, saying Tyson’s speed, scale and distributi­on expertise — as well as its 84-year history — puts it ahead of companies who have been in the plant-based market for longer.

Tyson is also being careful to describe its products as “alternativ­e proteins” and not “meat,” a label used by some plant-based companies that has riled the meat industry.

 ?? KEVIN SMITH/AP ?? Tyson is introducin­g a plant-based meat alternativ­e. The nuggets are made from pea protein.
KEVIN SMITH/AP Tyson is introducin­g a plant-based meat alternativ­e. The nuggets are made from pea protein.

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