Investors’ role in sustainable food

green been sapling studio shot with black background

For more than 50 years, intensively reared animals have been the main source of protein for consumers worldwide, and a major ingredient for multi-billion-dollar brands like Burger King, McDonald’s and KFC.

However, the success of today’s dominant industrialised system of livestock and fish production has come at a cost. The industry is a key driver of antibiotic resistance and is the world’s largest user of freshwater resources. It is also the primary cause of deforestation, accounting for 80 per cent of all agricultural land and for 14.5 per cent of global greenhouse gas emissions.

Meanwhile, the overconsumption of animal proteins, particularly red and processed meat has been linked to a number of growing health concerns including cancer and diabetes.

Rising consumer awareness of these health and environmental concerns has coincided with a boom in food innovation and technology. Plant-based and cell cultured ‘meat’ are now able to replicate the taste, texture and flavour of traditional animal meat products without the associated environmental impacts.

With a growing abundance of tasty new products, two-thirds of consumers are already choosing to eat less meat and more plant-based food. Barclays, JP Morgan, AT Kearney and UBS all predict that the alternative protein meat market will capture a significant portion of the traditional meat market, with projections ranging from 10 – 60 per cent over the next 15-20 years.

For companies and investors alike, this presents significant opportunity, and some are already reaping the benefits. Burger King in the US will be launching the Impossible Whopper nationwide after locations in the trial market outperformed the company’s national foot traffic by 18.5 per cent. In the UK, Greggs’ share price has enjoyed a record high, since the launch of its vegan sausage roll, while Beyond Meat’s IPO this year was the most successful IPO for a major US company this century.

Sponsored Content

By contrast, companies that fail to adapt and innovate threaten their ability to compete, drive growth and achieve long-term sustainability ambitions.

Since 2016, FAIRR, a global institutional network of more than 250 investors has been engaging with 25 of the biggest publicly listed food manufacturers and retailers to encourage these food giants to adopt a comprehensive protein diversification strategy that will help de-risk soft commodity supply chains and drive growth.

We found that the majority of companies are expanding their exposure to plant-based foods.  All the retailers in our engagement have expanded their plant-based product portfolio through increased own-brand or external product offerings.  Some retailers have gone further, with 50 per cent supporting demand through dedicated internal resourcing. Sainsbury’s, for example, now has a meat-free product development manager and Tesco hired a director of plant-based innovation in 2017.

Manufacturers, for their part, are expanding their exposure to low-carbon proteins primarily through acquisitions and direct investments in plant-based food companies. Mondelez and Kraft Heinz have announced venture arms that include plant-based and alternative protein start-ups as part of their remit, while Conagra, Nestlé, Kraft Heinz and Unilever have acquired dedicated plant-based/alternative protein brands.

But, on the whole, ‘Big Food’ has only just begun its journey towards a low-carbon portfolio. No company in our engagement was able to demonstrate a comprehensive approach that includes board-level support to transition product portfolios to include low-carbon and less resource-intensive ingredients and products.

Investors therefore have an important role to play in encouraging their assets to understand the scale of the shift that is currently underway and to adopt a strategy to leverage innovation and new technologies to drive long-term value creation.

Jo Raven is the engagement manager at FAIRR.

Leave a Comment

La Caisse’s oil exit pays off as renewables portfolio pulls ahead of fossil fuels

La Caisse’s oil exit pays off as renewables portfolio pulls ahead of fossil fuels

Divesting from the oil sector has been a boon for La Caisse’s performance, as the Canadian pension giant says its energy investments have earned billions in value-add compared to the benchmark since the inception of its climate strategy. Head of sustainability Bertrand Millot unpacks the fund’s approach in an interview with Top1000funds.com.

Sort content by

It’s actions not words that count in the energy transition

Investors that want to address the low carbon transition as a potential investment theme should build an investment process that helps them focus on tangible investments being made by companies, not just pledges made on paper, the Fiduciary Investors Symposium at Stanford University has heard.

The hands and feet of AI and the renewable energy transition

A foundation stone of the transition to renewable energy - semiconductors - is paradoxically a major contributor to the problem it’s helping to solve. How asset owners think about investing in a solution that is also part of the problem is a challenging and complex task.

CalSTRS positions to take advantage of energy transition

CalSTRS has recognised the unique opportunity presented by the energy transition needs a unique response and its Sustainable Investment and Stewardship Strategies (SISS) portfolio has been specifically positioned to invest in opportunities that fall between private equity and infrastructure asset class buckets.

USS outlines new climate scenarios for improved investment decision-making

USS and the University of Exeter have outlined new climate scenarios that focus on short term, real world impacts and are more useful for investors. USS will use them to develop a long-term investment outlook and top-down portfolio construction.

Politicisation of ESG a ‘constructive dialogue’: Mercer’s Rich Nuzum 

The discourse around ESG investing may be “messy” but Mercer’s global chief investment strategist, Rich Nuzum, says media and political scrutiny can help sharpen the focus of pensions and sovereigns on their objectives and duties.

Net zero: engagement and renewable energy investments pay off at USS

The UK’s largest private pension fund, USS has made ground on its path to net zero with effective engagement, measuring the Scope 3 emissions of its corporate assets and bottom-up carbon analysis focused on transition risk in emerging market equities. But investors need policy makers to do much more.

Previous