Eyeing alternatives – meat companies with stakes in meat-free and cell-based meat
Gutfried vegan products marketed by Zur Mühlen Gruppe · Just Food

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The rise of plant-based products and the arrival of cell-cultured options as meat alternatives are trends very much on the radar of the world's largest meat companies.

Here we look at what those businesses are doing to make sure they are not missing out on alternative protein solutions.

Tönnies Group

Tönnies Group is one of the largest meat processors in Germany, offering pork, beef and convenience products.

Set up in 1971, the family-owned company's "core business" centres on the slaughter, butchering, processing and refining of pigs, sows and cattle. In 2022, the group's turnover stood at €6.82bn, with its workforce at 15,200 worldwide.

However, Tönnies has interests in meat alternatives, with its Zur Mühlen Gruppe subsidiary active in the sector.

Zur Mühlen Gruppe, home to meat brands including Böklunder and Eberswalder, also markets meat-free products under brands including Vevia 4 You and a meat brand, Gutfried.

In 2024, the company announced it had invested in Nosh, a Berlin-based ingredients firm.

Nosh uses fermentation to make non-GMO fungi to use as an ingredient in meat analogues and alternative-seafood products. The company says the ingredient can also be used in bakery, dairy, confectionery and pet food.

JBS

The Brazil-based meat titan has had an up-and-down record in alternatives to conventional meat.

In the spring of 2019, JBS, the world's largest beef processor, unveiled a plant-based version of a burger for the first time.

JBS launched the vegan product under one of its flagship Brazilian brands, Seara. The company said the Incrível Burger Seara Gourmet burger contained soy, beets, wheat, garlic and onion.

In March 2020, JBS announced it would launch plant-based protein brand Ozo in the US via a new subsidiary, Planterra Foods. Burgers were among the products to be rolled out.

However, two-and-a-half years later, the company announced it was to close Planterra and “focus its efforts on its plant-based operations in Brazil and Europe, which continue to gain market share and expand their respective customer bases”.

In Europe, JBS is present in plant-based meat through its ownership of Dutch business Vivera, which it acquired in 2021.

In November of that year, JBS announced it taken a stake in Spain-based cultivated meat firm BioTech Foods.

JBS announced in September 2023 that it had started construction work on an R&D site that will develop cell-based protein, marking its latest investment in the early-stage industry.

Tyson Foods

The US meat giant, one of the largest companies in the sector, has perhaps done more than any of its rivals to position itself in alternatives to its core product.