Plant protein startups vie to tap China’s hungry market
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[March 20, 2019]
By Vincent Chow
HONG KONG (Reuters) - Start-ups
specializing in alternative protein, from eggless eggs to pea-stuffed
burgers and cell-grown fish products, are piling into the Chinese
territory of Hong Kong to tap the mainland's booming multi-billion
dollar food market.
At a time when traditional meat farmers have seen profits hurt by the
U.S.-China trade war and the spread of swine fever, companies such as
Impossible Foods, JUST and Beyond Meat are luring affluent Asian
consumers with products they say are more sustainable and
environmentally friendly than conventional meat.
The global meat substitutes market was estimated at $4.6 billion last
year and is predicted to reach $6.4 billion by 2023, according to
research firm Markets and Markets. Asia is the fastest growing region.
Backed by some of the world's top billionaires including Hong Kong
businessman Li Ka-shing, philanthropist Bill Gates and actor Leonardo
DiCaprio, plant protein firms are expanding into China for the first
time this year.
San Francisco-based JUST, valued at $1 billion and which counts venture
capitalist Peter Thiel as one of its backers, is planning to launch its
mung bean faux egg product in six Chinese cities starting next month.
"China is the most important market to JUST globally," said Cyrus Pan,
JUST's China general manager.
JUST has inked deals with Alibaba's Tmall and JD.com to distribute its
egg product starting in Shanghai, Beijing, Tianjin, Guangzhou, Chengdu
and Shenzhen, before expanding to other cities.
The company says the use of mung bean as its key ingredient is important
for food security and appeals to the Chinese market given its tradition
as a dietary staple.
China has a history of food safety scandals from melamine-tainted eggs,
smuggled frozen meat years beyond its expiry date and recycled "gutter
oil" to crops tainted with heavy metals.
Nick Cooney, managing partner of Lever VC, a U.S.-Asian venture capital
fund focused on alternative protein startups, said firms like his are
eyeing joint ventures, exports and product technology licensing
opportunities in China.
"Chinese consumers seem to be more open to novel foods than those in
nearly any other country," he said.
Beyond Meat, which makes burgers and sausages from pea protein, has seen
sales in Hong Kong increase 300 percent last year, said David Yeung,
Beyond Meat's distributor in the special administrative region.
Backed by Tyson, the world's largest meat processor, Beyond Meat filed
for an initial public offering on the Nasdaq last November and plans to
start distributing in the mainland in the second half of this year.
Rival Impossible Foods, which makes burgers out of soy, has said
plant-based meat will eliminate the need for animals in the food chain
and make the global food system sustainable.
The group has received around $450 million in funding since 2011 with
investments from Lee Ka-shing's Horizons Ventures and Google Ventures.
Since launching in five restaurants in Hong Kong last April, the group's
products are now in over 100 restaurants in Hong Kong and Macau.
[to top of second column] |
Journalists taste test the plant-based hamburgers during a media
tour of Impossible Foods labs and processing plant in Redwood City,
California, U.S. October 6, 2016. REUTERS/Beck Diefenbach/File Photo
Impossible plans to open in mainland China within the next two years.
ASIAN TASTES
Hong Kong-based Avant Meats, which uses cell technology to replicate
fish and seafood products, is developing a cell-based fish maw prototype
due for launch in the third quarter of this year, its chief executive
Carrie Chan told Reuters.
Fish maw, or swim bladders, are popular in Asian soups and stews and are
used to add collagen to food.
Right Treat, another Hong Kong company headed by Yeung, is replicating
Asia's favorite meat - pork - using mushrooms, peas and rice for use in
dumplings and meatballs.
The company has seen its sales of its Omnipork triple since launching in
Hong Kong in April 2018. It has since expanded to Singapore, Macau and
Taiwan, and plans to sell in mainland China this year.
"If we want to change the world, we must find ways to shift Asian diet
and consumption, which means we must find ways to reduce Asia’s
dependence on pork and other meat products,” said Yeung, who also runs
Green Monday, a startup tackling global food insecurity and climate
change.
Omnipork is available at more than 40 stores and will be stocked in
major Hong Kong supermarket chains by the end of March, Yeung says.
Advocates say meat substitutes are healthier and also use less water,
produce fewer greenhouse gas emissions and use less land than producing
the same amount of meat.
Consumers, however, must be willing to pay a premium.
Omnipork retails for HK$43 ($5.48) for 230g (8 ounces) versus HK$37 for
the same amount of minced pork.
Impossible's burger at HK$88 is more than double the price of a Shake
Shack burger in Hong Kong.
Yet the explosion of alternative protein products across Hong Kong has
given consumers such as executive recruiter Shazz Sabnani, greater
variety.
"Before I had to rely more on vegetables and tofu-based products,
whereas now I've introduced more of these fake meats to my diet."
Still, not everyone is convinced about the fake meat trend.
Tseung So, a retired 70-year-old said the spaghetti bolognaise made with
omnipork at Green Monday's "Kind Kitchen" in Hong Kong, was not as tasty
as real meat.
"Why would we eat this when we can eat the same dish but with normal
pork? I don't think this will make meat eaters eat less meat but they
will probably become more popular with real vegetarians.”
($1 = 7.8496 Hong Kong dollars)
(Writing by Farah Master; Additional reporting by Forina Fu; Editing by
Lincoln Feast)
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