A Three-Course Menu of Innovation
The response to this challenge isn't a single silver bullet, but more of a three-course meal of technological progress. First, you have the most familiar course, the plant-based alternatives. Companies like Beyond Meat and Oatly stormed onto the scene, promising a guilt-free future. The initial hype, I think we can all agree, was a bit much. The stock charts look like a rollercoaster designed by a madman. But beneath the volatility, the core idea persists. The products are getting better, and the environmental and health arguments haven't gone away.
Then there’s the second course, which is far less glamorous but perhaps more robust. I’m talking about agricultural innovation. This is the "picks and shovels" play. Companies like Nutrien, which produce fertilisers, are essential. It doesn't matter if their products are used to grow soybeans for a plant-based patty or feed for a more efficiently raised cow. They stand to benefit from the simple, undeniable fact that the world needs more food. It’s a pragmatic way to approach the theme without betting on a single, trendy foodstuff.
Finally, we have the futuristic dessert, cellular agriculture. This is the science fiction stuff, growing actual meat in a lab from animal cells. It’s still very early days, of course, and the costs are astronomical. But with regulatory bodies in the US and Singapore giving it the nod, the door has creaked open. This is the high-risk, high-potential part of the story, one for the patient investor with a strong stomach.