From plant-based meat to macadamia milk, food producers, retailers and
manufacturers can now accurately report on the sustainability impact of their
alternative protein businesses — thanks to two new reporting
frameworks. The frameworks were
designed by $68 trillion-backed investor network FAIRR
Initiative and the Good Food
Institute (GFI) — an international non-profit reimagining
meat production, and are backed by investors and industry leaders.
FAIRR and GFI co-developed the new frameworks with input from over 50 companies, investors and NGOs — including Unilever, Eat Just, Newton
Investment Management, PIMCO, Blue Horizon and the WWF-UK — as
well as environmental, social and governance
(ESG) and life cycle assessment (LCA) experts. Following today’s launch,
the authors of the frameworks will work with alternative protein brands that
want to use the frameworks to report on ESG factors such as carbon emissions, land, water and nutrition impacts.
The way we currently produce meat, eggs and dairy is incredibly
resource-intensive — accounting for 77
percent of agricultural
land use, nearly 14.5
percent
of global GHG emissions and causing more deforestation and using more
antibiotics than any other industry — yet providing only one-third of humanity’s
global protein supply. These and other climate, nature and food security
concerns represent increasingly material financial risks, with heat stress alone
predicted to wipe 20 percent off the global value of beef
production.
With standardized, mandatory climate and nature-related disclosures soon
expected to become a requirement in certain regions, the two new frameworks are
vital to enable the food industry to assess impacts and establish best practice
in the alternative proteins space.
The new frameworks are also expected to catalyze investment by equipping
financial institutions with a toolkit of disclosures and metrics to gain
transparent and actionable insights into a company’s activities — highlighting
the reduced impacts of alternative proteins compared to the multiple risks of
conventional meat, eggs, seafood and dairy production.
FAIRR and GFI’s open-source Alternative Proteins ESG Reporting Framework for
Specialized Companies and the Alternative Proteins ESG Reporting Framework
for Diversified Companies provide investors, governments and consumers with a
route to receiving accurate information from each alternative protein business.
“We are thrilled to produce a reporting tool that will allow alternative protein
companies to showcase the many ESG advantages of their current business models,”
says Sharyn Murray, Investor Engagement Manager at Good Food Institute.
“Alternative proteins offer meaningfully lower greenhouse gas emissions as
compared to conventional animal protein, as well as considerable food
safety
and nutritional advantages. As the alternative protein industry continues to
partner with the private sector to build responsible and sustainable businesses
of the future, these frameworks will enable companies to claim their natural
leadership role on ESG. This will lift up and guide all alternative protein
companies toward best practices and the use of one common language to reveal the
huge planetary rewards the industry offers.”
Alternative proteins — including
plant-based,
fermentation-enabled (made using microbes — such as Aqua Cultured Foods’
‘fish,’
Perfect Day’s cow-free
milk
and the growing array of
mycoproteins
coming to market), and cultivated
meat,
seafood,
eggs and dairy — are expected to provide a pathway to decarbonizing food
production while meeting the global demand for protein: In fact, a report
earlier this year from Blue Horizon and Boston Consulting Group asserted
that with 25 percent of global GHG emissions caused by the food value chain, a
global shift to alternative proteins may be the most capital-efficient and
high-impact
solution
to addressing the climate crisis. Over the past few years, investment in
alternative proteins has increased by an average 5-year growth rate of 91
percent through 2021 (according to GFI analysis of PitchBook data); and sales
are estimated to rise by up to $1.1 trillion by 2040 to devour up to 60
percent of the total meat
market.
Research shows that
many plant-based meat products have a fifth to less than a tenth of the
environmental impact of meat-based equivalents. Yet until today, there have been
no comprehensive standards for companies manufacturing and selling alternative
proteins to assess and disclose the kind of rich ESG data that investors and
companies, and consumers need to make informed decisions.
“As alternative protein startups grow and mature, and eventually become the food
industry giants of tomorrow, this new specialized framework will help to ensure
that they are ready for the ESG disclosures that are now demanded of all large
companies across private and public markets,” says Rosie Wardle, co-founder
and partner at Synthesis Capital. “We welcome new tools in the market such
as this framework, which brings much-needed structure and consistency to
measuring sustainability impacts. We will be integrating the framework into our
existing ESG policies and processes to help us further understand company
performance in a more detailed way and monitor impact over time.”
The Specialized Framework is designed for manufacturers and ingredient suppliers
whose core focus is alternative proteins — such as meat, dairy or whey protein,
or gelatin. It encapsulates the most material risks and opportunities across the
full E, S and G spectrum, for example, on sourcing, certification, consumer
engagement, soil health, plastic waste, water consumption and nutrition.
“This framework will empower companies to measure and communicate positive
impact in ways that make sense and matter — for internal strategy and
decision-making, and for consumers,” says Lisa Wetstone, Senior Director of
Marketing, Innovation & Growth Strategy at MycoTechnology, Inc. “From small
startups to growth-stage startups like MycoTechology to established industry
players, there are so many ways to gather and interpret ESG data. This is
especially true given the nuances of our industry. We are lacking a common
language! Laying the groundwork to standardize this information can be a guide
for us all and lift the industry up as a whole.”
The Diversified Framework is designed for incumbent food companies, retailers,
manufacturers and animal protein producers with product portfolios that include
both conventional and alternative proteins. The Diversified Framework guides
reporting on ESG data related to the alternative proteins portion of businesses
— for example, on lobbying, water management, circularity and affordability —
that complements data that they are likely already reporting via other
frameworks. Enabling decision-makers to draw comparisons between their animal
and alternative proteins
businesses,
the Diversified Framework supports companies as they transition their practices
to meet a range of climate, biodiversity, social and governance-related goals.
Of the Diversified Framework, Beatriz Hlavnicka, Head of Marketing LATAM at
PlantPlus Foods, shared:
“This comprehensive framework enables us to compare and address the ESG risks
and opportunities of alternative proteins and conventional animal-based
proteins, and is guiding our disclosures on topics that matter the most to
stakeholders, in line with ESG best practices.”
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Sustainable Brands Staff
Published Sep 13, 2022 2pm EDT / 11am PDT / 7pm BST / 8pm CEST