Home Food Is fava the new soy? Wet fraction ‘optimises’ fava beans for a climate friendly alternative

Is fava the new soy? Wet fraction ‘optimises’ fava beans for a climate friendly alternative

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Is fava the new soy? Wet fraction ‘optimises’ fava beans for a climate friendly alternative

Demand for plant-based alternatives to meat and dairy products continues to rise. Data from Mordor Intelligence forecasts that the European plant-based protein market is set to increase in value to €2.36bn by 2025, a compound annual growth rate of 7.4% over the next five years.

Mordor’s market analysis reveals that soy protein has the highest market share. Available in flour, concentrate and isolate formats, soy protein is ‘widely’ used in processed food, as a protein supplement or as protein drinks.

Alongside perceived health benefits, environmental concerns over the impact of animal production on climate is one of the major drivers of the plant-based boom. And there are some serious red flags over the environmental impact of soy cultivation, researchers from the University of Copenhagen’s Department of Food Science have warned.

“Many consumers are crying out for alternatives to soy, a crop that places great strain on the environment,”​ said Iben Lykke Petersen, an assistant professor at the University of Copenhagen’s Department of Food Science, and one of the researchers behind the new study published in the journal Foods​.

‘Consumers are critical of soy’s environmental consequences’

Awareness of the negative environmental impacts linked to soy cultivation is rising. Defenders of the crop within the plant-based space are quick to point out that 90% of soy production actually goes into animal feed. Certainly, this is an inefficient use of soy protein. It takes 8-16lb of soybeans to produce 1lb of beef.

But behind beef, soy is the second largest agricultural driver of deforestation worldwide according to the WWF. In total, the area of land in South America devoted to soy grew from 42 million acres in 1990 to 114 million acres in 2010, mainly on land converted from natural ecosystems.