The dairy companies also present in dairy alternatives
Product range of Daily Harvest. Credit: Daily Harvest. · Just Food · Daily Harvest

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In the same way that large a number of the world's largest meat groups do business in the meat-alternatives sector, the biggest dairy companies, or food majors with a significant position in dairy, are involved in providing dairy alternatives.

This is not about turning their back on dairy products but an understanding there is demand for plant-based milk, yogurt, cheese and ice cream, products that have taken root to form a category too important to ignore.

Two other niches are attracting interest and investment – animal-free dairy and cell-cultured dairy.

Here we look at what major, conventional dairy companies are doing in these areas.

Chobani

US-based yogurt major Chobani first entered the plant-based market in the late 2010s and has continued its investment in the sector.

In 2019, Chobani launched oat-based products, its first foray outside of the dairy category.

As of May 2025, the company sells more than ten SKUs under its Chobani Oatmilk brand.

That month, Chobani announced the acquisition of US frozen-foods business Daily Harvest.

Founded in 2015, Daily Harvest sells frozen products, including smoothies, breakfast bowls and savoury meals.

It also markets pea-protein powder with which consumers can make their own organic and vegan smoothies.

Danone

The French dairy giant has made a series of moves to build a position in the market for dairy alternatives over the last decade or so.

Danone's most recent move came in May, when it acquired a majority stake in Kate Farms, a US-based business that makes plant-based and organic nutrition products.

Founded in 2011 by Richard and Michelle Laver, California-based Kate Farms supplies a range of products from nutritional shakes on sale at mass-market retailers to tube-feeding products sold directly to healthcare providers.

Danone's first major move move into dairy-free came in 2016 when it acquired WhiteWave Foods, the US manufacturer of the Alpro and Silk plant-based dairy-alternative ranges, for $12.5bn.

After announcing a target in 2018 to triple the size of its plant-based business to EUR5bn in sales by 2025, the company has invested in capex and product development.

In February 2019, Danone announced it was opening a new building at its facility in DuBois, Pennsylvania, dedicated to plant-based food products including yogurt.

In December that year, it was announced Danone had taken part in a funding round for US plant-based business Hälsa Foods through its in-house venture-capital fund Danone Manifesto Ventures.

December 2019 also saw Danone tell Just Food it planned to use its well-known brands to push plant-based dairy alternatives