NMS March 2020

Page 38

PlantBased Confusion

T

Angus. America’s Breed. Radale Tiner,

Regional Manager

New Mexico Texas

A reliable business partner is difficult to come by. Contact Radale Tiner to locate Angus genetics, select marketing options tailored to your needs, and to access American Angus Association® programs and services. Put the business breed to work for you.

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38

MARCH 2020

he National Cattlemen’s Beef Association (NCBA) released survey results that show widespread consumer confusion regarding the ingredient composition and purported benefits of plant-based fake meat products. In an online survey of more than 1,800 consumers, less than half of the respondents understood the labeling term “plant-based beef” was intended to describe an entirely vegetarian or vegan food product. One major source of confusion uncovered by NCBA’s research is that approximately one-third of surveyed consumers believed that plant-based fake meat products contained at least some real beef in them. When asked to evaluate specific product labels and marketing materials from some of the leading plant-based fake beef products currently on the market, the results were astonishing: ЇЇ Nearly two-thirds of respondents believed the fake meat products produced by Beyond Meat, Impossible Foods and LightLife contained real beef or some form of animal byproduct; ЇЇ 32 percent of consumers who were shown a package of Beyond Meat’s “Beyond Burger®” plant-based patties (which features a cow icon) told researchers that they thought the patties contained at least small amounts of real meat; and ЇЇ 37 percent of consumers who were shown a package of Lightlife’s “Gimme Lean®,” which features the word “beef” highlighted in a red box, said the product contained at least some real beef. Neither product contains any real beef. “The fact that so many consumers look at these labels and think that the products include meat or other animal byproducts is a clear sign that the misleading labeling and deceptive marketing practices of plantbased fake meat companies has caused real consumer confusion,” said NCBA Past President Jennifer Houston. “Many of these fake-meat products purposely use graphics and words that trade on beef’s good name,

and it needs to stop immediately. Consumers rely on names and product packaging to inform their purchasing decisions, and they have a right to know that this information is accurate and not misleading.” When asked to rank plant-based fake meat vs. beef on a host of food attributes, the results were even more startling. For example: ЇЇ 44 percent of consumers believed plant-based products were lower in sodium, when leading plant-based fake beef is anywhere between 220 percent to 620 percent higher in sodium than the same size serving of real ground beef. ЇЇ A mere 24 percent of respondents correctly identified beef as being lower in sodium. Scientifically speaking, beef is considered to be an unprocessed or minimally processed food, whereas plant-based fake meat products are classified as an ultraprocessed food product. Unfortunately, 34 percent of ЇЇ respondents believed plant-based fake meat to be less processed and another 34 percent believed fake and real beef products were equivalent on the food processing scale. On the broad category of healthfulness, more than half of consumers believed plant-based meat was better. “This research is a wake-up call for our industry, the news media, and for federal regulators,” Houston said. “We in the beef industry need to do a better job educating consumers about the fact that beef is a nutrient-rich source of high-quality protein and essential nutrients that can play a key role in any healthy lifestyle. We also need reporters and regulators to understand how many consumers are confused and/or misinformed about exactly what’s in these new plant-based alternatives.” The Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has the power to prevent this sort of consumer confusion. In 2020, NCBA said it hopes there will be an opportunity to work with the agency to end inappropriate use of the word “beef” on all non-meat product labels.


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Walmart’s Health Care Services will Cause “a Consumer Revolution

3min
pages 84-85

Book Review

1min
pages 86-87

Investor’s Await Carbon Details on Carbon Tax Credit Before Acting

8min
pages 88-91

Changes as of February 1

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page 96

Real Estate Guide

24min
pages 78-83

Marketplace

3min
pages 72-73

Seedstock Guide

5min
pages 74-77

New Mexico Federal Lands Council News

5min
pages 58-59

New Trich Rules in Place With Approved

27min
pages 65-71

NMSU Extension Ranch Management Camp Application Deadline April 10

2min
page 61

In Memoriam

15min
pages 62-64

Proactive Health Means a Genetic Approach

5min
page 60

Justice Thomas Says He Was Wrong to Trust the Administrative State

3min
page 57

Beef It’s What’s for Dinner Recipe

14min
pages 53-56

American Red Program to Meet the Needs of the American Producer

1min
page 52

New Mexico Beef Council Bullhorn

8min
pages 45-51

Cattle Growers’ Present Scholarships

3min
page 44

View From the Backside

13min
pages 40-43

Plant-Based Confusion

4min
pages 38-39

Sour Vegans: Drink Breast Milk, Not Cow’s Milk

1min
page 35

New Mexico CowBelles Jingle Jangle

17min
pages 16-24

President’s Message

14min
pages 10-15

On the Edge of Common Sense

4min
pages 28-29

News Update

6min
pages 30-31

Proof of Superior Feed Efficiency Utilizing Limousin & Lim-Flex® Genetics

7min
pages 26-27

Collector’s Corner

4min
pages 36-37

North American Limousin Foundation Elects New Officers

1min
page 25
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