April 26, 2024

Shultz: We have plant-based burgers, but Americans still like real meat

Bruce Shultz, Vice President National Farmers Organization

The news of JBS, the world’s largest meat processing company, getting out of the plant-based protein market caught my eye.

This story, reported by The Denver Business News, noted that JBS started Planterra two years ago. Planterra opened a processing facility in Denver, employing approximately 120 people while marketing its brand OZO.

JBS is a smart and well-funded company. It took the route of investing in what was believed to be the biggest challenger to real meat.

Many companies in other industries have done the same thing. Shell Oil, for instance, bought a 44% interest in U.S. solar firm Silicon Ranch in 2018.

That same year, they invested $20 million in an India-based renewable energy company, Husk Power Systems.

Large multinational companies, whether publicly traded such as Shell, or privately held such as JBS, have the resources to hedge their bets and invest in potential competition.

JBS still is invested in plant-based products in both Europe and Brazil. However, JBS made the decision that plant-based protein is not the profitable venture that they first thought it might be in the United States.

Other plant-based protein companies are finding out the same thing. Beyond Meat has partnered with McDonald’s to create the McPlant burger.

As reported by CNBC, McDonald’s rolled out the addition to the menu in about 600 locations in February. Their study discovered a much lower demand than expected.

Though the two companies did sign a three-year commitment to sell McPlant burgers in the European market.

Of the five countries in this test, Beyond Meat reported good sales in only two countries, the United Kingdom and Austria.

Beyond Meat has seen its stock price go from a price of $65.68 in January to $14.24 in October.

These are only two segments of the story concerning plant-based protein. The fact is, Americans like real meat.

While some people will prefer plant-based burgers to real burgers, this is a smaller group than anticipated.

I am a rancher and we eat meat all the time. If I want a carrot, I will eat a carrot. When I want a burger, I will eat a burger.

I do not eat a burger shaped like a carrot with orange food coloring and chemicals I cannot pronounce to pretend I am having a carrot.

As a rancher, I am encouraged by these events and the knowledge that as a whole our nation still enjoys real family farm-raised meat.

So, I ask you all to celebrate with me and go enjoy a delicious juicy steak.

Bruce Shultz is the vice president of the National Farmers Organization.