Plant-Based ‘Meats’ Catch On in the Pandemic

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That hasn’t slowed demand for meat. Sales from April 12 to May 9 were 28 percent higher than in the four weeks ending Jan. 18, before the first reported case of coronavirus in the United States, according to data from Nielsen.

But the meat industry’s troubles may have provided a boost for plant-based meat substitutes, which had a jump of 35 percent in sales during the same period. (The increase just for uncooked products was more dramatic: 53 percent for the vegan products versus 34 percent for meat.)

Before the pandemic, William Thomas, 19, usually bought ground beef and chicken on his weekly shopping trip near his home in Brookline, N.H. Since April, he has been buying plant-based meat instead. “I’d always been trying to block out a lot of what was going on behind the scenes of the meat industry, but I can’t ignore it forever,” he said.

Mr. Thomas, who is currently unemployed, is now eating a mostly vegetarian diet for the first time in his life.

“With the pandemic around, a lot of the industries, you know, not taking the proper precautions to make sure everyone is safe, I feel like that would probably also go in toward the products,” he said.

Mr. Karmali and his fiancée have been trying since December to eat a more plant-based diet. At the beginning of the coronavirus outbreak, he had a craving for meat. But then, he noticed higher meat prices and read reports of worker deaths.

“I just figured that the dynamics there were enough of a nudge not to bother creating more demand” for meat, he said.

Impossible Foods’ plant in Oakland, Calif., has not yet had any coronavirus cases, said the chief executive, Pat Brown. No cases have been reported at the North Carolina factory of Atlantic Natural Foods, which makes the Loma Linda line of plant-based foods, said Doug Hines, the company’s founder.

Even before the coronavirus, interest in plant-based meat was rising. From late December to early January, before the virus hit, sales of plant-based meat were up 30 percent over the same period a year earlier, according to the Nielsen data. Meat sales increased about 1 percent during that same period.

Now, for the first time, plant-based meats are often competitive in price with ground beef, and sometimes easier to find, as fears of meat shortages prompt bulk buying.

“I wondered, what is this? I’ve never seen this before,” said Ms. Lauretti, a stay-at-home parent on the Upper West Side of Manhattan. “They taste like normal beef burgers, and they are delicious.” Her 16-year-old son, Alessandro Dal Bon, liked them, too. So she’ll buy them again.

Impossible Foods, which before the pandemic sold more of its products in restaurants than in grocery stores, has expanded its retail footprint. Mr. Brown said his products are now sold in more than 3,000 stores, up from fewer than 200 in January. Its work force of 653 full-time employees is up from 587 in January.

In the first quarter of the year, Beyond Meat, whose stock is publicly traded, reported net revenue of $97.1 million, an increase of 141 percent over last year. Its products are now in 25,000 grocery stores nationwide, and the company recently expanded into China.

Beyond Meat will offer a value pack starting this summer, priced competitively with traditional meat products. “We did not anticipate doing this,” said Ethan Brown, the chief executive (who is not related to Pat Brown of Impossible Foods). “But when all of a sudden, you start to see wholesale prices move in the beef industry, we said, ‘We’ve got to do something now.’”

Although these companies have long criticized the meat industry, they are careful not to gloat over their successes.

“We’re not waving the flag saying, ‘This is great,’ ” said Mr. Brown, of Beyond Meat. “It’s a tragic situation. Sure, we want to reach more people throughout the period, but overall, it’s a tough thing.”

Author: ApnayOnline

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