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Health Markets:

Vegetarian Foods

Market Assessment Publications Ltd.
Market Study  September 2004

Single-user PDF - GBP 799.00  


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The vegetarian foods market, in value terms, continues to show a declining growth rate, which fell to 6% in 2003/2004. This represents a fall from a growth rate of 7.4% in 2002/2003, and from the market's major growth periods in 2000/2001 and 2001/2002 (which saw growth rates of 14.6% and 16.8%, respectively).

This situation has been attributed to apparent saturation in the numbers of vegetarians within the UK population, the fact that a growing proportion of the vegetarian foods market is represented by lower-priced retailer own-label products, and the low growth rate of the frozen sector. The much larger, and more strongly growing, chilled sector is dominated by sales of retailer own-label items, and these are also gaining share in the frozen market.

Although difficult to quantify, vegetarians are estimated to have accounted for 5.1% of the UK population in 2003, down from a peak of 5.4% in 1997. This comprises 6.1% of females and 3.9% of males — with the highest penetrations in the C1 and AB socio-economic groups.

However, a growth rate of 6% is still very creditable within the overall food market, and manufacturers of vegetarian brands, many of which also produce foods for the own-label market, continue to develop and promote their products. The most significant manufacturer in the vegetarian foods market is Marlow Foods, with its Quorn? range and now owned by Montagu Private Equity. Other important manufacturers and brands are Heinz, with the Linda McCartney range; the traditional frozen foods companies Findus (owned by the private-equity company EQT); Birds Eye (owned by Unilever); Cauldron Foods (part of The Rayner Food Group); Haldane Foods (owned by ADM); and Tivall (an Israeli manufacturer).

The vegetarian foods market now encompasses products specifically manufactured for vegetarians, such as equivalents of many meat-based foods made using soya or wheat protein, or the mycoprotein Quorn?, and those traditional products which are suitable for vegetarians, usually represented by meat-free ready meals and meal accompaniments. This represents an evolution in the market, which previously tended to consider vegetarian foods in terms of the former category only. This evolution has been driven by increasing consumption of vegetarian foods by the growing number of meat reducers and avoiders, rather than just by `true' vegetarians. In consequence, the market has become more mainstream in nature.

There are a number of segments within each of the chilled and frozen sectors of the market. In chilled vegetarian foods, almost all segments showed growth between 2002/2003 and 2003/2004. However, the slow growth in the frozen sector is attributed to a decline in the largest segment, and in several others.

Purchases of vegetarian foods are forecast to increase by 5.5% in value terms in 2004/2005, falling to an annual growth rate of 4.3% by 2007/2008 and rising to a growth rate of 4.6% in 2008/2009. The value share held by chilled products is predicted to increase to 73.8% by that date, up from 70.3% currently.

Executive Summary

1. Introduction

OVERVIEW 2

HISTORY OF VEGETARIANISM 2

DEFINITIONS WITHIN
VEGETARIANISM 3

‘HIDDEN’ ANIMAL PRODUCTS 4

REASONS FOR
BECOMING VEGETARIAN 4

Table 1: Land Areas Needed to
Supply Total UK Demand for
Selected Foods (million hectares
and hectares per tonne), 1999 5

2. Strategic Overview

MARKET DYNAMICS AND SEGMENTATION 6

Factors Driving or Affecting
the Market 6

Consumption of Meat and
Meat Products 6

Table 2: Average Per Capita Consumption of Meat and
Meat Products by Type
(grams per person per week),
1971-2002/2003 6

The Effects of BSE and the
Foot-and-Mouth Epidemic 7

Health Claims for
Vegetarian Foods 7

Table 3: Reduced Meat Eating
or Meat Avoidance
(% of adults), 1984-2001 9

Table 4: Non-Meat Eaters/
Red-Meat Avoiders by Sex
and Age (% of adults),
1984-2001 9

Consumption of Fruit
and Vegetables 10

Table 5: Average Per Capita Consumption of Vegetables
and Fruit (grams per person
per week), 1975-2002/2003 11

Table 6: Average Daily Fruit
and Vegetable Consumption
by Number of Portions
per Day by Sex and Age
(%), 2000/2001 12

Environmental and
Ethical Factors 12

Growth in Vegetarianism 13

Table 7: Number and
Percentage of Vegetarians
in the UK by Sex
(million and %), 1984-2003 13

Figure 1: Number of Vegetarians
in the UK (million), 1984-2003 15

Table 8: Vegetarians by
Socio-Economic Group
(% of adults), 1990-2001 16

Market Size, Sectors
and Growth 17

Table 9: The UK Vegetarian
Foods Market by Sector
by Value (£m at rsp),
1997/1998-2003/2004 18

Figure 2: The Total UK
Vegetarian Foods Market
by Value (£m at rsp),
1997/1998-2003/2004 19

DISTRIBUTION 19

COMPETITIVE STRUCTURE 19

ADVERTISING 20

THE CONSUMER 20

MARKET FORECASTS 21

Table 10: Forecast Total UK Vegetarian Foods Market
by Value (£m at rsp),
2004/2005-2008/2009 21

3. Sector Analysis

INTRODUCTION 22

MARKET SIZE 22

Chilled Vegetarian Foods 22

Table 11: The UK Chilled
Vegetarian Foods Sector
by Value by Product
Segment (£m at rsp),
2002/2003-2003/2004 23

Table 12: Shares Held by Brands
and Own-Label Products Within
the UK Chilled Vegetarian Foods Sector by Value by Product
Segment (%), 2003/2004 24

Frozen Vegetarian Foods 24

 

Table 13: The UK Frozen
Vegetarian Foods Sector
by Value by Product
Segment (£m at rsp),
2002/2003 and 2003/2004 25

Table 14: Shares Held by Brands
and Own-Label Products Within
the UK Frozen Vegetarian
Foods Sector by Value
by Product Segment
(%), 2003/2004 26

CONSUMER TRENDS 26

Chilled Vegetarian Foods 26

Frozen Vegetarian Foods 26

ADVERTISING AND
MARKETING ACTIVITY
27

Table 15: Main Media Advertising Expenditure on Vegetarian
Foods by Brand (£000),
Years Ending December
1998-2003 and March 2004 27

DISTRIBUTION 28

Table 16: UK Sales of Vegetarian Foods by Major Retail Outlet
by Value (%),
2001/2002-2003/2004 29

Figure 3: UK Sales of Vegetarian
Foods by Major Retail Outlet
by Value (%), 2003/2004 30

4. A European Perspective

Table 17: Numbers of Vegetarians
in Selected European Countries
(000 and %), 2002 32

5. PEST Analysis

POLITICAL AND
ECONOMIC FACTORS 33

Government Encouragement
of Healthy Eating 33

Rising Levels of Obesity 33

SOCIAL FACTORS 33

Meat Reduction
and Avoidance 33

TECHNOLOGICAL FACTORS 34

Product Developments 34

The Internet 34

6. Consumer Dynamics

OVERVIEW 35

Table 18: Summary Results
of Consumer Research — Vegetarianism and Purchasing
of Vegetarian Foods (number
and % of respondents), 2004 35

Table 19: Summary Results of Consumer Research — Reasons
for Vegetarianism and
Demand for Availability of
More Vegetarian Products
(% of vegetarian
respondents ), 2004 36

Table 20: Summary Results
of Consumer Research —

Types of Vegetarian Foods
Purchased (% of
respondents who buy
vegetarian foods), 2004 37

NON-VEGETARIANS 37

Table 21: Those Who Are Not Vegetarians and Never Buy Vegetarian Foods, and Those
Who Are Not Vegetarians
But Sometimes Buy
Vegetarian Foods (% of all respondents), 2004 38

REDUCED MEAT EATING
OR CONSIDERING
VEGETARIANISM
41

Table 22: Those Who, Although
Not Vegetarians, Have Reduced
Their Meat Eating, and Those Who Are Thinking of Becoming
Vegetarian (% of all
non-vegetarian
respondents), 2004 41

TYPES OF VEGETARIAN 44

Table 23: Those Who Do Not
Eat Meat or Fish, and Those
Who Do Not Eat Meat
But Do Eat Fish (% of all
vegetarian respondents), 2004 45

REASONS FOR
BEING VEGETARIAN
48

Table 24: Those Who Are
Vegetarian for Health Reasons,
and Those Who Are
Vegetarian Because They
Are Concerned About Animal
Cruelty or The Environment
(% of all vegetarian
respondents), 2004 49

DEMAND FOR
AVAILABILITY OF MORE VEGETARIAN FOODS
52

Table 25: Those Who Think
That More Vegetarian Products
Ought to be Offered
(% of all vegetarian
respondents), 2004 52

TYPES OF VEGETARIAN
FOODS PURCHASED
55

Chilled and Frozen
Vegetarian Ready Meals 55

Table 26: Purchasing of Chilled
and Frozen Vegetarian
Ready Meals (% of all
respondents who purchase
vegetarian foods), 2004 55

Vegetarian Sausages, Burgers
and Grills, and Pastry Products 58

Table 27: Purchasing of Chilled
or Frozen Vegetarian Sausages, Burgers or Grills, and of Chilled
or Frozen Vegetarian Pastry
Products (% of all respondents
who purchase vegetarian
foods), 2004 59

Vegetarian Ingredients and
‘Other Vegetarian Products’ 62

Table 28: Purchasing of
Vegetarian Ingredients and
Other Vegetarian Products
(% of all respondents who
purchase vegetarian
foods), 2004 62

7. Company Profiles

MARLOW FOODS LTD 66

Corporate Strategy 66

Products 66

Advertising 66

Market Share and Profitability 67

Table 29: Marlow Foods Ltd
— Turnover and Pre-Tax Profit
(£m and %), Years Ending
31st December 2001-2003 67

Recent Company
Developments 67

HJ HEINZ FROZEN
& CHILLED FOODS LTD
68

Corporate Strategy 68

Products 68

Advertising 68

Market Share and Profitability 68

Table 30: HJ Heinz Frozen
& Chilled Foods Ltd — Turnover
and Pre-Tax Profit (£m and %),
Years Ending 28th April 2001-
26th April 2003 69

Recent Company
Developments 69

CAULDRON FOODS LTD 69

Corporate Strategy 69

Products 70

Advertising 70

Market Share and Profitability 70

Table 31: Cauldron Foods Ltd
— Turnover and Pre-Tax Profit
(£m and %), Years Ending
31st December 2000-2002 71

Recent Company
Developments 71

FINDUS LTD 71

Corporate Strategy 71

Products 71

Advertising 72

Market Share and Profitability 72

Table 32: Findus Ltd — Turnover
and Pre-Tax Profit (£m and %),
Years Ending 31st December
2000-2002 72

Recent Company
Developments 72

DALEPAK FOODS PLC 73

Corporate Strategy 73

Products 73

Advertising 73

Market Share and Profitability 73

Table 33: Northern Foods PLC
— Turnover and Pre-Tax Profit
(£m and %), Years Ending
31st March 2001-2003 74

Recent Company
Developments 74

HALDANE FOODS LTD 74

Corporate Strategy 74

Products 74

Advertising 75

Market Share and Profitability 75

 

Table 34: Haldane Foods Ltd
— Turnover and Pre-Tax Profit
(£m and %), Years Ending
31st December 2001-2003 75

Recent Company
Developments 75

BIRDS EYE FOODS LTD 76

Corporate Strategy 76

Products 76

Advertising 76

Market Share and Profitability 76

Table 35: Unilever PLC —
Turnover and Pre-Tax Profit
(
_m and %), Years Ending
31st December 2001-2003 77

Recent Company
Developments 77

TIVALL 77

Corporate Strategy 77

Products 78

Advertising 78

Recent Company
Developments 78

Profitability 78

GOODLIFE FOODS lTD 78

Corporate Strategy 78

Products 78

Advertising 78

Market Share and Profitability 79

Table 36: Goodlife Foods Ltd
— Turnover and Pre-Tax Profit
(£m and %), Years Ending
31st December 2000-
29th December 2003 79

THE REDWOOD WHOLEFOOD COMPANY LTD 79

Corporate Strategy 79

Products 79

Advertising 80

Market Share and Profitability 80

Recent Company
Developments 80

WICKEN FEN WHOLESOME
FOODS LTD
80

Corporate Strategy 80

Products 80

Advertising 80

Profitability 81

Recent Company
Developments 81

RETAILER OWN-LABEL
SUPPLIERS
81

8. The Future

FORECASTS 82

Table 37: Forecast UK
Vegetarian Foods Market by
Sector by Value (£m at rsp), 2004/2005-2008/2009 83

Figure 4: Forecast Total UK
Vegetarian Foods Market
by Value (£m at rsp),
2004/2005-2008/2009 84

9. Further Sources

Associations 85

Publications 85

General Sources 85

Government Publications 86

Other Sources 86

Bonnier Information Sources 86





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