Climate Change

Food giants can help put alternative meats on everyone’s table

By Emma Ignaszewski, June 6, 2022

As the lead story in a recent edition of Economist argues, avoiding mass hunger brought on by the war in Ukraine is everyone’s business. More of the world’s finite crops must feed people, as the world can no longer afford the inefficiencies and risks of cycling crops through animals. Today there are promising emerging technologies with the potential to feed a growing global population while simultaneously addressing climate change, global health, and food security: meat without the animal.

Plant-based alternatives to conventional meat, seafood, eggs, and dairy, as well as cultivated meat, have seen significant increases in market traction in recent years. Plant-based meat has established itself as small but mighty in the meat aisle, representing 1.4 percent of US retail meat sales in 2021, with sales growing 74 percent since 2018. Cultivated meat, identical to conventional meat at the cellular level, has scaled up from bench research to pilot production in just a few years.

Given that production of animal-based food is responsible for over half of the greenhouse gas emissions linked to agriculture—nearly 20 percent of total global human-caused greenhouse gas emissions—modernizing meat production by divorcing it from the animal can help slash emissions and limit warming to 2 degrees Celsius or lower relative to preindustrial levels. Conventional meat production is also a major driver of pandemic risk and uses significantly more land and water than plant-based meat, putting already-vulnerable communities with scarce resources at greater risk.

As consumer interest in alternative proteins grows, partially driven by the global impacts of conventional meat, multinational food corporations are investing in, partnering with, and acquiring startups behind these products. The largest six meat companies in the US—including JBS, Tyson, and Cargill—have all invested in alternative protein companies and/or launched their own product lines. Just this past year, JBS invested $100 million in acquiring a cultivated meat company and creating a cultivated meat research and development center. While some think that participation from multinational corporations may stifle food system transformation, my colleagues and I at The Good Food Institute believe that companies of all sizes—including incumbents—will be needed to accelerate the transition away from conventional meat.

Incumbent investment can funnel resources to and help scale up alternative proteins. There are clear benefits in leveraging the considerable production, sales, marketing, and distribution resources of large food corporations. Who knows better than meat companies how to market to meat eaters? Today’s alternative proteins are taking a new approach by appealing to omnivores with products that mimic the taste, texture, and sizzle of conventional meat. The industry clout of a multinational company can translate into greater product availability through distribution partnerships given their established store buyer relationships, making products more accessible and affordable for all.

Incumbents across sectors are constantly evolving in the face of the global climate challenge and changing consumer needs. The shift of big oil and car companies toward renewable energy and electric vehicles has been incremental, and that’s been part of the critique of the environmental community—clearly, it would be better for climate outcomes to see these sectors shifting to less harmful practices with all due haste. Similarly, large food and meat companies should be celebrated for transitioning their protein portfolios away from conventional meat. This helps them meet environmental, social, and corporate governance goals ranging from protecting vulnerable communities to reducing greenhouse gas emissions.

Incumbent meat producers have already begun referring to themselves as “protein companies,” indicating that they will provide protein in whatever form consumers want, which current trends suggest will increasingly be in animal-free forms. These companies are leveraging new alternative protein technologies to position themselves for the future.

Bringing incumbents to the table will help alternative proteins achieve scale quickly—critical if the world is to meet international climate targets. Forecasts by agricultural economists indicate that global meat production and consumption are expected to more than double by 2050. All countries need meat made in ways that reduce emissions, improve global health, facilitate ecosystem recovery, and ensure food security. And soon.

Given the stakes of climate change and global food security, multinational corporations producing and selling alternative proteins is much better than multinational corporations using (all) their resources and market power for conventional meat production that adds risk and vulnerability to an already unstable food system.

Alternative proteins are an important piece—but still just one piece—of the food system transformation needed to sustainably and equitably feed 10 billion people by 2050. Other parts of the puzzle include regenerative farming practices, greater crop diversity, transparent supply chains, fair labor practices, and regional approaches to food system solutions and livelihoods, which may also be integrated into the practices and priorities of large food corporations. As these companies seek to satisfy shifting consumer demand, achieve cost-of-goods efficiencies, and meet net-zero commitments, their resources can be channeled to benefit consumers, workers, public health, animals, and the environment, all while maintaining their bottom line.

Even faced with global issues, most individuals aren’t choosing to swap out beef burgers for kale and chickpeas. But if cultivated meat and plant-based alternatives to conventional meat taste the same or better, cost the same or less, and are as accessible as conventional products, then choosing those options still allows consumers to enjoy the foods they love. Change takes time, but it can be accelerated by making the sustainable choice the easy, default choice. That’s exactly why people need delicious, affordable alternatives. Large food and meat companies—the ones with the most resources to move markets—can bring their diverse assets to bear on food system transformation. Let’s celebrate increased access to alternative proteins as these solutions will help drive the transition.

There is no silver bullet for overcoming the challenge of building a sustainable, secure, and just food system. True change requires a big tent approach, where everyone—entrepreneurs, farmers, and big food conglomerates—works together to reduce agricultural emissions, improve public health outcomes, and increase food system resilience. There’s a place for everyone at the table.

As the coronavirus crisis shows, we need science now more than ever.

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  • Nowhere does the article state that these "alternative protines" provide the same nutruiton. They may taste similar, have similar price points and be accessable in a wide range of stoes but if they are not healthy. Go fish.

  • You sound like a vegan trying to use climate change to promote your don't-eat-meat agenda.

    Confinement feeding practices are inhumane, and I'd like to see them ended. Likewise feeding grain to livestock when the grain would feed more people is counterproductive. But we have crop and food wastes that can either be left to rot, or fed to livestock and so turned into food.

    Healthy grasslands sequester lots of carbon. Grass evolved with grazers, and needs to be grazed to be healthy; ungrazed grasslands choke and poison themselves, and turn themselves to desert. Or you can burn those lands, and turn their stored carbon into pollution and greenhouse gasses. There are lots of lands that won't grow much of anything but grass; using them to produce food means grazing livestock, or hunting wild animals. Scientific, rotational grazing--get started understanding this by googling Allan Savory, and see what he has to say--keeps grasslands as healthy, and sequestering as much carbon, as possible. Giving up entirely on pastured livestock will make climate change worse while it makes the world hungrier.

    Yes, pasture-grazed-only would increase the price of some meats, and I can't afford beef or lamb now. It would still be better for the planet.

    What about ungulates' methane burps, you say? 44 percent of climate change if you're a vegan, 3 percent if you are the US cattle industry, maybe 14 percent if you don't have an agenda. Still too much.

    Big problem. Simple solution. Just 2 or 3 percent of seaweeds Asparagopsis taxiformis or A. armata in the diet can reduce an ungulate's methane burps by as much as 99 percent. Of course, hauling seaweed to all the world's cows, sheep and goats (and Wildebeests?) would consume a lot of energy. But if we're smart, we will grow microalgae for energy, chemicals, food and livestock feeds anywhere we have certain wastes or polluted waters to clean up--over most of the human-occupied planet. Find the gene in Asparagopsis that makes it produce bromoform, the chemical that inhibits the parasitic bacteria that makes the methane in the cow's rumen, and transfer it into some of those algae. Extract the oils and starches for energy, chemicals and plastics: the remnant is a high-protein livestock supplement that should make the cows grow 15 percent faster on the same feed--the seaweed does--so farmers will love it. And growing it everywhere means not having to transport it far.

    The veggie burger I tried was too expensive, and not so tasty, but they're workin' on it. If cell cultured meat becomes a more affordable way to enjoy a tender tasty T-bone, sure. But you only told half the story above: the other half is that grasslands sequester a lot of carbon, grasslands need grazers to be healthy, scientifically managed grazing works best, and grazers are still the best way to produce protein in a hungry world.