Tyson enters crowded plant-based meat market with
blended proteins
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[June 13, 2019]
By Tina Bellon
(Reuters) - U.S. meat processor Tyson Foods
Inc on Thursday launched its first vegetarian and mixed protein products
as it joined a growing number of companies catering to rising demand for
plant-based meat products.
Tyson will sell vegetarian nuggets, blended protein burgers made from
beef and pea protein, and sausages and meatballs that combine chicken
with plants including chickpeas, black beans and quinoa, the company
said in a statement.
The products, under Tyson's new Raised & Rooted brand, will be sold
through its customers, sales outlets and foodservice operators, Justin
Whitmore, head of Tyson's alternative protein business, said in an
interview, declining to elaborate.
The nuggets will be launched in the summer, and burgers in the fall, he
added.
The largest U.S. meat processor, known for its Ball Park hot dogs and
Jimmy Dean sausages, believes the company's long experience in protein
product development, manufacturing and distribution puts it in a unique
position to enter the plant-based market and drive sales across all
segments.
Whitmore said it was too early to estimate revenues, calling Tyson's
plant-based business highly incremental, but he noted that that could
change.
"The double-digit growth in the sector is largely driven by meat eaters
who want the health and nutrition that they perceive to come from plants
along with the taste they've always had from animal protein," Whitmore
said, adding that the company was working on additional plant-based
products.
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Tyson Chief Executive Noel White said in a statement the company
remained firmly committed to expanding its traditional meat business,
but is shifting toward becoming a protein company.
The change comes as many companies are trying to carve out a space in
the U.S. alternative meat market which analysts estimate to be worth
$100 billion by 2035.
California upstarts Beyond Meat Inc and Impossible Foods Inc each sell
100% plant-based meat alternatives to retailers and fast food chains
across the United States.
Tyson sold its 6.5% stake in Beyond Meat in late April, just days before
the company went public, to focus on the development of its own
plant-based products.
Vegan ground beef and burger patties by Canadian packaged meat producer
Maple Leaf Foods Inc, sold under its LightLife brand, will be on U.S.
store shelves this summer.
Nestle, the world's biggest packaged foods group, is aiming to sell a
pea-based veggie patty called Awesome Burger under its U.S. plant-based
Sweet Earth brand in the fall.
(This story corrects first and second paragraph to reflect that nuggets
are not vegan or fully plant-based but vegetarian.)
(Reporting by Tina Bellon in New York; Editing by Richard Chang)
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