Willingness to replace animal-based products with pulses among consumers in different European countries

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Standard

Willingness to replace animal-based products with pulses among consumers in different European countries. / Henn, Katharina; Bøye Olsen, Søren; Goddyn, Hannelore; Bredie, Wender L.P.

In: Food Research International, Vol. 157, 111403, 2022.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Henn, K, Bøye Olsen, S, Goddyn, H & Bredie, WLP 2022, 'Willingness to replace animal-based products with pulses among consumers in different European countries', Food Research International, vol. 157, 111403. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.foodres.2022.111403

APA

Henn, K., Bøye Olsen, S., Goddyn, H., & Bredie, W. L. P. (2022). Willingness to replace animal-based products with pulses among consumers in different European countries. Food Research International, 157, [111403]. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.foodres.2022.111403

Vancouver

Henn K, Bøye Olsen S, Goddyn H, Bredie WLP. Willingness to replace animal-based products with pulses among consumers in different European countries. Food Research International. 2022;157. 111403. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.foodres.2022.111403

Author

Henn, Katharina ; Bøye Olsen, Søren ; Goddyn, Hannelore ; Bredie, Wender L.P. / Willingness to replace animal-based products with pulses among consumers in different European countries. In: Food Research International. 2022 ; Vol. 157.

Bibtex

@article{ddc623b6964d49d78c3bc0ff8483a219,
title = "Willingness to replace animal-based products with pulses among consumers in different European countries",
abstract = "The growing world population and increased meat consumption pose a challenge for current food production systems. While pulses present a promising position in terms of low impacts in primary production and high nutritional quality, it is unclear whether consumers are willing to consume pulses instead of meat. Based on an online survey answered by 4,322 respondents across five European countries, this study examined consumers{\textquoteright} willingness to utilize pulses as a plant-based alternative to animal-based products. More than a third of pulse consumers (42%) were, to some extent, already using pulses as an alternative to animal-based foods. Beef was noted as the most frequently replaced type of food, mainly driven by arguments relating to health, environment, and sustainability, especially relevant for German and Danish consumers. Respondents who did not indicate a current replacement of animal-based foods stated a relatively low willingness to change in the future (40%). German pulse consumers were likely to be part of the low willingness segment. In contrast, Polish consumers possessed a relatively higher incidence of using pulses instead of meat, especially pork and poultry. Respondents with a low replacement willingness indicated a high importance of future pulse-based products to be natural, while respondents already using pulses instead of animal-based foods expected convenient and minimally processed foods. Respondents, who already replaced meat with pulses or expressed a low future willingness, stated to prefer plain pulses over processed pulse-based products, and meat-resembling forms considering the former segment, alternatively to meat. These preferences and expectations should be considered for future product development, especially if aiming to attract unwilling consumers to shift to pulse-based foods.",
keywords = "Behavior, Cross-cultural research, Expectations, Future products, Legumes, Meat alternatives, Survey, Sustainability",
author = "Katharina Henn and {B{\o}ye Olsen}, S{\o}ren and Hannelore Goddyn and Bredie, {Wender L.P.}",
note = "Publisher Copyright: {\textcopyright}2022",
year = "2022",
doi = "10.1016/j.foodres.2022.111403",
language = "English",
volume = "157",
journal = "Food Research International",
issn = "0963-9969",
publisher = "Pergamon Press",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Willingness to replace animal-based products with pulses among consumers in different European countries

AU - Henn, Katharina

AU - Bøye Olsen, Søren

AU - Goddyn, Hannelore

AU - Bredie, Wender L.P.

N1 - Publisher Copyright: ©2022

PY - 2022

Y1 - 2022

N2 - The growing world population and increased meat consumption pose a challenge for current food production systems. While pulses present a promising position in terms of low impacts in primary production and high nutritional quality, it is unclear whether consumers are willing to consume pulses instead of meat. Based on an online survey answered by 4,322 respondents across five European countries, this study examined consumers’ willingness to utilize pulses as a plant-based alternative to animal-based products. More than a third of pulse consumers (42%) were, to some extent, already using pulses as an alternative to animal-based foods. Beef was noted as the most frequently replaced type of food, mainly driven by arguments relating to health, environment, and sustainability, especially relevant for German and Danish consumers. Respondents who did not indicate a current replacement of animal-based foods stated a relatively low willingness to change in the future (40%). German pulse consumers were likely to be part of the low willingness segment. In contrast, Polish consumers possessed a relatively higher incidence of using pulses instead of meat, especially pork and poultry. Respondents with a low replacement willingness indicated a high importance of future pulse-based products to be natural, while respondents already using pulses instead of animal-based foods expected convenient and minimally processed foods. Respondents, who already replaced meat with pulses or expressed a low future willingness, stated to prefer plain pulses over processed pulse-based products, and meat-resembling forms considering the former segment, alternatively to meat. These preferences and expectations should be considered for future product development, especially if aiming to attract unwilling consumers to shift to pulse-based foods.

AB - The growing world population and increased meat consumption pose a challenge for current food production systems. While pulses present a promising position in terms of low impacts in primary production and high nutritional quality, it is unclear whether consumers are willing to consume pulses instead of meat. Based on an online survey answered by 4,322 respondents across five European countries, this study examined consumers’ willingness to utilize pulses as a plant-based alternative to animal-based products. More than a third of pulse consumers (42%) were, to some extent, already using pulses as an alternative to animal-based foods. Beef was noted as the most frequently replaced type of food, mainly driven by arguments relating to health, environment, and sustainability, especially relevant for German and Danish consumers. Respondents who did not indicate a current replacement of animal-based foods stated a relatively low willingness to change in the future (40%). German pulse consumers were likely to be part of the low willingness segment. In contrast, Polish consumers possessed a relatively higher incidence of using pulses instead of meat, especially pork and poultry. Respondents with a low replacement willingness indicated a high importance of future pulse-based products to be natural, while respondents already using pulses instead of animal-based foods expected convenient and minimally processed foods. Respondents, who already replaced meat with pulses or expressed a low future willingness, stated to prefer plain pulses over processed pulse-based products, and meat-resembling forms considering the former segment, alternatively to meat. These preferences and expectations should be considered for future product development, especially if aiming to attract unwilling consumers to shift to pulse-based foods.

KW - Behavior

KW - Cross-cultural research

KW - Expectations

KW - Future products

KW - Legumes

KW - Meat alternatives

KW - Survey

KW - Sustainability

U2 - 10.1016/j.foodres.2022.111403

DO - 10.1016/j.foodres.2022.111403

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 35761657

AN - SCOPUS:85132417982

VL - 157

JO - Food Research International

JF - Food Research International

SN - 0963-9969

M1 - 111403

ER -

ID: 312044898