In a joint venture at a Wisconsin plant, flour milled from Iowa
yellow peas is mixed with water and spun at high speed through
stainless steel drums, separating the protein from starch and fiber.
The resulting powder ends up blended into waffle mixes, sports
drinks, nutrition bars and protein shakes - small examples of a much
larger push by the world’s biggest agriculture firms to find
alternative plant-based proteins to feed people and livestock
worldwide.
"When we looked at where is the future going, the pea is the
up-and-coming thing," said David Henstrom, Cargill Inc’s
vice-president of starches, sweeteners and texturizers.
Peas are in many ways the ideal modern American food: protein-rich,
plant-based and gluten-free. While the market remains relatively
small, the demand for pea powder and other emerging protein sources
is soaring, from the middle classes in China and the
health-conscious in California to livestock producers and fish
farmers who need to fatten animals on ever-tighter budgets.
Cargill and its competitors - such as Archer Daniels Midland and
Richardson International, the biggest Canadian grain handler - are
investing in specialty ingredients in search of higher profit
margins than they can extract from bigger commodity crops such as
soybeans, corn and wheat.
(For a graphic on rising global protein consumption and demand for
peas, see: https://tmsnrt.rs/2Hc8Wjw )
Cargill invested an undisclosed sum in January in a joint venture
with PURIS, a family-run company that started in Iowa as a seed
company and now owns the Wisconsin pea-powder plant. The two firms
are also working to boost the protein content in peas through
cross-breeding, which has not been previously reported.
Cargill rival ADM is building its own pea processing plant in North
Dakota and signing contracts with farmers to buy and grow yellow
peas, Ken Campbell, ADM’s president of specialty ingredients, said
in a statement to Reuters. Company researchers are also studying
another 30 types of protein options, including nuts and seeds.
Other firms are trying draw more protein from canola, oats and many
other so-called emerging proteins, and Cargill has explored
insect-based feed for fish and poultry.
Seed and chemical firm DowDuPont Inc told Reuters it plans to launch
a canola seed supercharged with protein through traditional
cross-breeding as soon as next year.
Richardson International started construction in April of a
C$30-million ($23 million) laboratory in Winnipeg to study proteins
and other food ingredients. The firm is exploring a move into pea
and oat protein concentrates that could start next year, senior
vice-president of technology Chuck Cohen said in an interview.
France-based food ingredient company Roquette is building plant in
Manitoba to produce pea proteins in North America, which currently
imports from Europe.
SOARING DEMAND
Projections for soaring sales from alternative plant proteins have
enticed large grain traders that make money by buying, selling,
storing, shipping and trading crops. Years of oversupplied grain
markets and thin margins have squeezed the trading operations of ADM,
Bunge Ltd, Cargill and Louis Dreyfus Co – known collectively as the
“ABCDs” - although conditions have improved recently.
Global demand for protein – whether from meat, aquaculture or plant
sources – is booming in part due to rising incomes in emerging
markets in Asia and Africa, industry analysts say. In North America,
consumers are shifting their diet preferences to include more
protein, and 35 percent of U.S. households last year said they
follow a specific protein-focused diet, such as Paleo or
low-carbohydrate, according to research conducted by Nielsen.
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The trend is driving a shift in grocery shopping. In the year ended
July 8, 2017, sales of plant-based food and beverages in the U.S.
increased 14.7 percent over the previous period, according to
Nielsen. Sales of meat alternatives are growing especially within
prepared foods, an indication that consumers are trying options once
only available in niche stores.
Global pea protein sales amounted to $73.4 million in 2016,
according to research firm Grand View Research, but are forecast to
quadruple by 2025, reaching $313.5 million in sales, helped by
popular diets free of gluten and lactose and an expanding middle
class in developing nations.
Even with such explosive growth, pea proteins would have high
potential upside because they would account for a fraction of the
projected $48.77 billion global animal and plant protein ingredients
market by 2025, which is led by meat, according to Grand View.
POWERING UP THE PEA
Cargill's partnership with PURIS includes breeding pea crops for
higher protein content. Standard peas contain 18 to 22 percent
protein, but PURIS this year will start selling peas packed with 28
percent protein for planting by farmers in the northern Plains and
Midwest, said PURIS president Tyler Lorenzen. Once processed, pea
powders can contain about 80 percent protein.
Creating new varieties of protein-packed peas, however, can take
seven years or more because it is done through conventional breeding
rather than genetic modification, Lorenzen said. The lack of genetic
modification, however, also attracts many consumers who prefer more
organic foods, said Pascal Leroy, head of Roquette's pea and new
protein business line.
In Canada, one of the world's biggest pea exporters, at least three
pea protein plants are planned or increasing production, including
Verdient Foods in Saskatchewan, whose investors include Titanic
director James Cameron. That gives farmers an incentive to vary
plantings that are now dominated by wheat and canola.
Roquette is building what it says will be the world's biggest pea
plant in Manitoba, on the belief the vegetable has unique consumer
appeal. German company Canadian Protein Innovation plans a plant in
Moose Jaw, Saskatchewan.
Illinois-based ADM told Reuters it is building a new pea protein
processing plant at the site of one of its soybean processing
complexes in Enderlin, North Dakota. The location gives the company
proximity to yellow pea producers and transportation to domestic and
international customers, according to ADM’s Campbell.
ADM will launch its line of pea powders as an ingredient for food
manufacturers early next year and introduce other plant-based
protein product lines in the following two years, the company said,
declining to give further details.
Unlike Cargill, ADM is seeking to boost pea protein levels in the
processing plant - rather than through crop breeding - and is buying
most of its supplies from nearby North Dakota farmers, the company
said. ADM officials declined to detail how it can boost protein in a
factory, citing competitive concerns.
(Reporting by Rod Nickel and P.J. Huffstutter; Editing by Brian
Thevenot)
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