Germany: Dairies are opening up plant-based milk alternatives

Published 2021년 7월 29일

Tridge summary

The article, featured in Lebensmittelpraxis 11/2021, highlights a significant shift in the food industry, with a spotlight on the surge in sales of alternative dairy products such as imitation milk, yoghurt, and pudding based on oats, soy, almond, hazelnut, coconut, and rice. These alternatives have seen impressive growth, with over 40% increase in sales within the past year and 52% rise in sales volumes, indicating a popular trend towards plant-based diets. Oat drinks have been particularly favored, reaching a sales value of €184 million in 2020. The growing presence of these alternatives in supermarkets, including discounters, has led to increased competition against traditional dairy products, prompting concerns within the dairy industry. The EU regulation limiting the use of 'milk' terminology to products from lactating animals has done little to distinguish alternative products, instead contributing to their growing mainstream acceptance.
Disclaimer:The above summary was generated by Tridge's proprietary AI model for informational purposes.

Original content

This article was first published in the trade journal Lebensmittelpraxis 11/2021. It's like with mosquitoes: You can take a bite easily, but when you get into such a swarm of “calf biters” it becomes very uncomfortable. This is what happened to the dairy industry with imitation milk for decades. They are actually old hat. They have been approved in Germany - and therefore on the market - since 1990. But: who noticed? Who bothered? Hardly anyone in the dairy industry. At least not for the first 25 years. But now the phase in which these alternatives were only bought by a few nutrition-sensitive consumers seems to be over. Kai-Brit Bechtold, market researcher at the international nutrition organization ProVeg, where “more” comes from. "This shows that plant-based alternatives are no longer niche products, but have arrived in the middle of society," sums up the market researcher. First milk, now yoghurt and pudding This is not an individual opinion, as the market research institute ...

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