Country for PR: United Kingdom
Contributor: PR Newswire Europe
Tuesday, November 15 2022 - 19:00
AsiaNet
MORE THAN FOUR IN TEN CONSUMERS GLOBALLY THINK EATING PLANT-BASED FOOD WILL REPLACE MEAT IN THE NEXT DECADE
OSLO, Norway, Nov. 15, 2022 /PRNewswire-AsiaNet/ --

GRAINS OF TRUTH REPORT: NEW EAT-GLOBESCAN GLOBAL RESEARCH ALSO HIGHLIGHTS 
CONSUMERS AHEAD OF GOVERNMENTS ON ROLE OF FOOD IN CLIMATE CHANGE

Forty-two percent of consumers worldwide think most people will likely be 
eating plant-based food instead of meat in the next ten years, according to a 
new global consumer research study conducted by 
GlobeScan[https://globescan.com/], a global insights and advisory consultancy, 
and EAT[https://eatforum.org/], the science-based non-profit for global food 
system transformation.

The report into healthy, sustainable, and equitable food also revealed that 
more than half of people (51%) say they feel less secure about their food 
supply in the face of Covid-19, conflict, and climate change. There is 
significant variation in how this is being felt in different countries and 
regions, with Latin America reporting some of the highest levels of food 
insecurity in Brazil (73%), Columbia (72%), and Peru (69%), together with Kenya 
(77%) and Italy (64%). Respondents from India (19%), Saudi Arabia (33%), and 
Egypt (35%) on the other hand show the least concern.

The findings featured in the second edition of the Grains of Truth 
series[https://eatforum.org/initiatives/eat-cook-club/grains-of-truth/], look 
at the opinions of almost 30,000 consumers in 31 markets around the world 
across healthy, sustainable, and equitable food provision.

Worries about food supply extend to concerns about food shortages, with 60 
percent of respondents citing this as a very serious problem. There is 
considerable variation in levels of concern among countries, with China (16%), 
Hong Kong (24%), and South Korea (28%) being the least worried, while over 
eight in ten in Columbia, Peru, Kenya, Mexico, Brazil, Argentina, and South 
Africa say they are worried about food shortages. The rising cost of living is 
also intertwining with food supply so a total of Ninety-two percent of the 
public also say the price of their regular food shopping has increased in the 
last three months. 

Against a backdrop of rising food insecurity and increasing prices, a promising 
60 percent of consumers say they eat healthy food most or all of the time, with 
a growing number of people eating vegetarian or vegan diets - more than one in 
five (22%) say that they eat plant-based or vegan food, up from 17 percent in 
2019. Interest in trying plant-based diets is also growing across all age 
groups; 40 percent of Gen Z, 43 percent of Millennials, 37 percent of Gen X, 
and 28 percent of Baby Boomers say they are very interested in trying this way 
of eating.

There are significant gaps in some countries between those who are interested 
in switching to a plant-based diet and those who are already doing this. The 
largest gaps are in Vietnam (38% points), Thailand (37% points), and Brazil 
(22% points).  

Nearly nine in ten consumers (89%) say that buying environmentally healthy and 
responsible food is important to them. Two-thirds (64%) claim they are willing 
to pay more for it, an indication of the value consumers place on these goods 
even against the backdrop of the rising cost of living.

Speaking about the research, Dr. Gunhild Stordalen, EAT Founder and Executive 
Chair, said: "The fact that so many people around the world are becoming more 
interested in eating healthy and sustainable food is an encouraging sign, a few 
years ago it would be unthinkable that 42 percent of people globally would 
believe plant-based food will replace meat inside a decade. But the public is 
starting to understand the escalating climate and nature crises and the dangers 
it brings to their everyday lives as it intertwines with the pandemic, the war 
against Ukraine, and the accelerating cost of living crisis. While consumers 
understand the issues, it is up to everyone else in the food system to act now 
to help them – access and affordability will play a critical role as the first 
edition of this report showed last year. EAT-Lancet 
2.0[https://eatforum.org/eat-lancet-commission/eat-lancet-commission-2-0/] will 
help to bring the latest science from different fields together to build 
consensus on targets for healthy, sustainable, and equitable food systems. This 
is critical to further bending the key trendlines in the right direction."

Chris Coulter, CEO of GlobeScan said: "This timely research provides insight 
into how rising food prices, Russia's illegal invasion of Ukraine and climate 
change have exacerbated consumer fears about food insecurity. Nevertheless, 
there appears to be a hopeful shift to more healthy and sustainable eating 
among consumers. Plant-based diets are on the rise in all regions of the world, 
and consumers are becoming increasingly aware of the link between climate 
change and food choices."

To download a copy of the full report, including country comparisons, please 
click here[https://eatforum.org/initiatives/eat-cook-club/grains-of-truth/].

Source: EAT
Translations

Japanese