Plant-based sales ARE growing, just not the usual suspects

What? Plant-based meat sales are lagging?!

No, this isnā€™t news to anyone in the industry. The plant-based ā€˜slowdownā€‹ā€™ has been on food manufacturersā€™ radar for at least a couple of years now, with the cost-of-living crisis and market saturation just two of the factors stunting category growth.

But just because sales of plant-based meat alternatives are sluggish, doesnā€™t mean plant-based across the board is struggling to grow. Itā€™s not.

The unusual suspects of the plant-based boomā€‹When industry and media refer to a plateauing in plant-based, theyā€™re largely referring to plant-based meat analogues.

Thatā€™s for two reasons: firstly, the plant-based meat category has ā€‹been plateauing, and secondly, measuring sales of packaged products sold from one section in-store is easier to do.

Whatā€™s more challenging is measuring sales of plant-based ingredients from multiple categories. These less-hyped ingredients range from tempeh and tofu (high-protein soy-based products that can substitute, but donā€™t mimic, meat) through to legumes and beans.

ā€œActual sales of plant-based ingredients are very much increasing,ā€ explained Jeroen Willemsen, innovation lead, Protein Shift, at Dutch agrifood ecosystem Foodvalley.

But theyā€™re just not the numbers on industryā€™s radar. ā€œItā€™s very difficult to get the actual [sales] numbers when products are used as an ingredient, rather than sold as a single SKU,ā€ he said at food- and ag-tech conference F&A Next in the Netherlands. ā€œI know for a fact thatā€™s where the growth is.ā€

Tempeh, beans, and legumes (such as chickpeas) are easy for consumers to find and use. GettyImages/sergeyryzhovWhy is the sale of plant-based ingredients on an upwards trajectory, whereas the plant-based meat market is flatter than itā€™s been in recent years? Willemsen puts it down to consumer routines. Tempeh, legumes, and beans are convenient for the consumer; theyā€™re not necessarily delegated to one section of the supermarket.

ā€œEven though we would like [consumers] to go to a separate aisle, to go and pick up that packet of plant-based meat or seafood, we also have to be realisticā€¦ Obviously we havenā€™t [managed] to reach out to them over the past 10-15 years.

ā€œBut we can ā€‹reach out to the consumer we want to reach with more convenience, and thatā€™s whatā€™s happening right now.ā€

What do the retailers say? And can they be doing more?ā€‹Willemsen is not alone in this view. The UKā€™s largest supermarket retailer Tesco has also observed a rise in demand for tofu and tempeh, which earlier this year observed, was up volume-wise by 20%.

Tesco also noted an increase in scratch cooking with vegetables and other meat-free ingredients, as well as plant-based whole cuts such as steak.

ā€œCustomers are starting to understand the versatility of plant-based ingredients and whole cuts, and are creating a wide variety of meals such as tofu stir-fries, meat-free curries using chicken alternatives or beans and pulses, and classic steak and chips using plant-based steaks,ā€ said Tescoā€™s plant-based food buyer Cate May back in April.

Should plant-based alternatives be delegated to a separate section in-store? GettyImages/coldsnowstormSome in the sector believe retailers can be doing more to increase plant-based sales.

Miriam Ueberall, chief R&D officer at Upfield Research & Development, for one, is critical of supermarketsā€™ segmentation of plant-based products ā€“ which can see alternatives placed in less-than-optimal locations.

ā€œRetailers can facilitate the entry point for consumers a lot, by having the right shelf placement, by not having a segment at the back of the store which claims to be ā€˜free-fromā€™ or ā€˜alt meatā€™.ā€

Instead, the R&D lead would prefer plant-based alternatives be located alongside their conventional dairy or meat counterparts. In so doing, she believes making animal-free swaps would be easier for consumers.

Manufacturers have a role to play in encouraging plant-based uptakeā€‹But itā€™s not only the responsibility of retailers. Manufacturers have a major role to play in encouraging plant-based uptake, suggested Ueberall.

Recipe development aside, itā€™s also about developing the right format and size of products that best hit the mark with consumers.

Others agree. Manufacturers, retailers and even foodservice operators can help encourage plant-based consumption by making it as easy as possible for consumers. That may not mean selling a plant-based seafood or meat product separately, but instead mixing it in with a salad or a sandwich for convenient consumption.

If itā€™s a plant-based seafood product, for example, brands might be better off getting creative with its presentation and format, suggested Kianti Figler, founder and CEO of Dutch cultivated salmon cell fat start-up Upstream Foods, at F&A Next.

ā€œI think there are better ways to go about it, and thatā€™s what we need to be focusing on.ā€

Reviews

0 %

User Score

0 ratings
Rate This

Leave your comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *