Dutch supermarkets are trying to get shoppers to choose plant-based proteins over meat

Tommy MalettaSustainability News, Trendspotting, Latest Headlines

By Sophie Kevany, Corporate Knights

Dutch grocer Jumbo turned heads this year when it stopped discounting fresh animal meat. Other European supermarkets are also trying to shift protein sales to improve diets and cut emissions.

European supermarkets are helping customers eat less meat and more plants in a bid to improve dietary health and reduce emissions. The new initiative, known as protein splits, aims to expand supermarket sales of plant proteins and shrink sales of animal ones. In Europe, a combination of shoppers wanting to eat less animal protein due to rising health, animal welfare and environmental concerns — plus supermarkets’ own worries about reducing their emissions and, in one country, government backing — appear to be driving the splits’ initial success. Here’s how protein splits work, and the prospects for seeing something similar at your local supermarket here in the United States.

How the Initiatives Were Born

In the Netherlands, which has led the protein split initiatives, the idea was born after roundtables between food system advocacy groups and retailers were held to discuss what the country calls a “protein transition” — a food system shift aimed at reducing dependency on meat and other proteins sourced from livestock.

Examples of animal proteins used to calculate the splits include fish, dairy, meat and eggs. Plant proteins include beans, pulses, nuts and seeds, as well as meat and dairy alternatives.

Though discussions around eating less meat are often fraught and contentious, this particular idea came about collaboratively. “It was fully voluntary [and later] the government…included it in their own protein monitor and commissioned the publication of the first national protein split,” says Pablo Moleman of ProVeg, a Dutch NGO that advocates for a more plant-based food system.

From there, the idea spread to other European NGOs and international retail outlets, he says.

Initial Results of Protein Split Initiatives Are Promising

The split initiatives appear to be working, at least for one major Dutch retailer, where meat sales have fallen. The supermarket, Jumbo, is the second-largest in the Netherlands and made headlines in March by ending discounts on fresh animal meat as part of efforts to flip its current protein split sales from 60 percent animal/40 percent plant to 60 percent plant/40 percent animal by 2030.

Other major supermarkets that have publicly committed to reaching 60 percent plant protein sales in the Netherlands by 2030 include Aldi, Dirk, Ekoplaza and Lidl, according to a government-commissioned protein split assessment published in March this year.

The emergence of the protein split initiative in the Netherlands is not surprising. Years of intensive farming, which made the country one of the world’s leading dairy and pork exporters, have also turned the country into a nitrogen pollution hotspot.

There are also rising concerns about public health, especially heart disease ( nitrogen pollution hotspot), as well as concern over diseases that spread from animals to humans. Active civil society groups have been a factor too, raising public awareness of intensive livestock production’s negative impact on the climate, air and water, says Florian Wall of Madre Brava, an NGO that advocates for sustainable food systems.

Earlier this year, a survey of Dutch consumers found consumers’ highest motivation for eating less meat and dairy was health, followed by animal welfare and environmental concerns.

Other efforts to reduce the effects of intensive animal protein production include a Dutch-led search for alternative proteins, like lab-grown meats, and a recent government announcement that it aims to increase the consumption of plant proteins to 50 percent of the national diet by 2030.

Yet another factor pushing the Netherlands ahead of other countries is size. The small country has become a global hub for food production and innovation, growing lots of food on tiny plots that are, in some ways, the exact opposite of America’s vast agricultural lands. But being so innovative cuts both ways, says Moleman — the country has one of the highest livestock densities in the world, but also the highest per capita consumption of meat alternatives in Europe.