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Regenerative agriculture was on the agenda at this year’s Climate Week, often taking up a third of the plenaries and panels. This would make sense given the numbers.


Our global food system accounts for 30% of the world’s greenhouse gas emissions. Food waste constitutes almost 30% of that number, representing 8% of the world’s greenhouse gas emissions. Industrial animal agriculture contributes 60% of that 30%, a whopping 18% of the world's total greenhouse gas emissions. Further, 32% of the world’s methane emissions come primarily from the supply chain of cows and sheep, but also from pigs, according to the United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP). It would be hard to significantly impact climate change without addressing a number as large as 32%.
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While cow burps are often cited as a source of methane as the jokes commonly note, a substantial portion of these emissions is also due to deforestation required to grow industrialized crops for animal feed. These animals need food in addition to other critical resources such as land, water, and time.
Ironically, we may think we cut down trees to grow food filled with protein and fiber for people. But we don’t. We deforest the planet and destroy biodiversity, in part, to grow food for a resource-masticating middleman: animals. We don’t feed them once; we feed them for their entire lifetimes. This is why animal factories are a leading causes of deforestation and biodiversity loss (site): it must continually clear forests to grow food for 80 billion factory animals.
In short, it turns out that we are great at feeding animals, but we are bad at feeding people, particularly as the population grows and the natural resources don’t.
Feeding animals instead of people is not just inefficient and a bad business equation (it takes 25-35 calories of feed to get 1 calorie of cow, furthering the need for deforestation to grow more crops), but this supply chain is also lengthy. This leaves a large environmental footprint. Recently, a New York Times article noted that the environmental cost of beef is $22.05 for a $5.34 meat portion. That is 413%. For cheese it is $3.76 for a $3.74 portion (101%). Chicken is $1.83 to $2.20 (83%). Chickpeas and tofu environmental to portion costs are $.74 to $1.46 (51%) and $.21 to $2.42 (9%), respectively.
As we can see, these destructive and long supply chains are an expensive endeavor. The damage from the overall food system of which animal protein plays a major role represents approximately $12.7 trillion in externalized costs to the consumer, according to the Food and Agricultural Organization of the United Nations (FAO). This is 10% of global GDP.
Despite this incredibly large footprint on our planet, sustainable food systems transformation driven by innovation currently receives 2.5%-4.8% of Climate funding, according to the Word Bank.
Investors take note: this is set to change, is already underway and sets the stage for investing momentum.
Given the industrial food system’s business inefficiencies, the growing concerns regarding producing enough food for a global population using our resource intensive system and the mounting negative impacts from the food system on the planet, blended capital investment (philanthropic, government, VCs, and public markets) is beginning to flow into food systems transformation.
If Climate Week has anything to do with it, more is on the way.
Family offices, governments, and investors around the world—99% of whom aren’t vegan and have no intention of ever becoming vegan—are looking to make a true impact and understand that protein diversification, complementing animal protein, is a powerful way to do so.
At VegTech™ Invest, we see this as an enormous business and investment case opportunity. Simply put, we could live without cars if we had to. We can’t live without food and protein. The way we produce protein now is unsustainable with our current natural resources and growing population. This is why, through our public markets, 35+ companies, food systems transformation ETF, we invest in leading companies (screen in) that are innovating for a more efficient and regenerative food system, positively impact food insecurity, Climate Change and biodiversity loss. Companies such as Ingredion, Givaudan, Novonesis and ABInBev are all examples.
If reducing methane emissions and the overall environmental impact of our food sector is so inexpensive, easy, and impactful, why haven’t we done it already? What could divert us from implementing this low-hanging fruit?
The biggest hurdle isn’t consumers, as is commonly thought. The biggest hurdle is Big Ag’s meat lobby’s power over politicians and the media. This influence ensures that government funding to the sector is slow and misinformation among consumers is rampant. Anecdotally, for example, I was in an interview when someone told me, "Consumers don’t like the taste of Beyond Meat." I said, "I do, and I know many who do." He responded, "I do, too, but I read it somewhere." In short, negative campaigns from the meat lobby had this panelist second-guessing his own tastebuds and experience. Wow, getting people to dislike something that they inherently like: that’s power!
It is important to note that EVs didn’t take over the roads in one day, and meat isn’t going away anytime soon. In other words, no, the world is not going vegan. There’s no need to panic. This isn’t an ‘either or’ situation. Meat will still be around: both 1) regenerative meat—expensive and very little of it, mostly feeding the wealthy, and 2) factory meat—inexpensive, subsidized, and what most people eat even when they think they are eating something better. Both will still exist.
However, allowing consumers to rotate in regenerative, complementary protein options and reduce their meat intake with other tasty items will mitigate the pressure on the planet and our natural resources. This keeps us moving forward, not backward, in the fight against Climate Change. If the meat lobby could be kept at bay, this diversification could happen relatively quickly and easily, providing meaningful change, expanded consumer choice, and maintaining America’s relevancy in food innovation and resiliency, a new priority of the Department of Defense.
Even better is that this represents an enormous business opportunity and investment case along the entire supply chain: AgTech, synthetic biology, regenerative ingredients, flavor and texture innovations and consumer packaged goods, as we believe at VegTech™ Invest. As more blended capital dollars flow to R&D for complementary proteins ameliorating the entire supply chain and regenerative practices, the more of the $9.1 trillion total food market ($1.4 trillion meat market) is addressed.
As a Cargill executive shared with me after the company changed their name from a meat company to a general protein company, in paraphrase, ‘We don’t know when the food system will shift, but when it does, it will go quickly.’
Mahesh Roy of IIGCC, an investor organization focused on Climate Change, noted on Upside & Impact Investing for Change podcast, that capital will flow from the private sector into food transformation as it has into the energy sector. As paraphrased, 'Keep it simple. Show people the data around the inefficiency of the current food system and they will find the opportunity to make money. Show them the added benefit of impact and the trillions will flow.'
Elysabeth Alfano is CEO of VegTech™ Invest, Advisor to the EATV ETF, and the voice of sustainability for the New York Stock Exchange, hosting the Upside & Impact: Investing for Change podcast.
Please note this article is for information purposes only and does not in any way constitute investment advice. It is essential that you seek advice from a registered financial professional prior to making any investment decision.
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