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Americans Are Gobbling Up Fake Meat and Milk Faster Than Ever

Sales of substitutes to replace all types of animal products are up, and now comprise a $3.7 billion dollar market, says Nielsen.

Americans Are Gobbling Up Fake Meat and Milk Faster Than Ever
The flagship burger is arranged for a photograph inside the American Airlines Group Inc. Flagship First Dining room at John F. Kennedy International Airport (JFK) in New York, U.S. (Photographer: Caitlin Ochs/Bloomberg)  

(Bloomberg) -- Americans can’t seem to get enough imitation meat and milk these days.

Sales of substitutes to replace all types of animal products are up, and now comprise a $3.7 billion dollar market, according to data from Nielsen released Wednesday. The research was commissioned by The Good Food Institute, which represents the plant-based foods industry.

Americans Are Gobbling Up Fake Meat and Milk Faster Than Ever

For example, imitation meat made from plants increased 23 percent in the year through Aug. 11 to $684 million. Silicon Valley’s Beyond Meat leads the pack with sales up 70 percent. About an eighth of all milk bought in stores isn’t from a cow, but rather from plants. Non-dairy yogurts, cheeses and ice cream are soaring, rising 40 percent and more.

By comparison, retail food sales generally is growing at 2 percent.

To be sure, soaring alternative proteins are still dwarfed by the $49 billion red meat and poultry market, and are unlikely to have any effect on traditional animal protein demand through the next decade, according to CoBank.

About 95 percent of Americans eat meat, a number that hasn’t changed in decades, said Eric Mittenthal, a spokesman for the North American Meat Institute. “It’s flattering that plant-based companies have sought to imitate what nature has perfected,” he said.

Americans Are Gobbling Up Fake Meat and Milk Faster Than Ever

((Data compiled by Nielsen included retail sales of plant-based foods that directly replaced animal products, including meat, seafood, eggs and dairy, as well as meals that contain direct animal-ingredient replacements.))

To contact the reporter on this story: Lydia Mulvany in Chicago at lmulvany2@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: James Attwood at jattwood3@bloomberg.net, Millie Munshi

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