Litcius/Paper detail

Familiarity and satisfaction with plant-based meat alternatives around the world

Nicholas Poh‐Jie Tan, João Graça, Christopher J. Hopwood

2025Future Foods12 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

• There is a strong correlation between familiarity and satisfaction with plant-based meat alternatives (PBMA). • Women, younger individuals, and those who consumed less meat are more familiar and satisfied with PBMAs. • The effects of age and meat consumption on familiarity and satisfaction with PBMAs were weaker for respondents in Asian countries (e.g., China, Indonesia). Meat consumption around the world is increasing, especially in economically developing countries (e.g., China). There is compelling evidence that the demand and consumption of meat has negative impacts on animal welfare, the environment, and people's health. Plant-Based Meat Alternatives (PBMA) represent one approach to reducing meat consumption. However, relatively little is known about how the factors that influence PBMAs acceptance vary across countries. We sought to examine the effects of gender, age, and meat consumption on familiarity and satisfaction with PBMAs, and to explore how these effects differed across 23 countries on four continents ( N = 20,966). We found that women, younger individuals, and those who consumed less meat were more familiar and satisfied with PBMAs. In Asian countries, the association between age and meat consumption with PBMA acceptance was weaker than those in Western countries, perhaps because of cultural differences in dietary traditions. Our findings highlight the importance demography and geographical context in attitudes about PBMAs and have practical implications for meat reduction efforts worldwide.

Topics & Concepts

PsychologyBusinessAgriculture Sustainability and Environmental ImpactFood Waste Reduction and SustainabilityMeat and Animal Product Quality
Familiarity and satisfaction with plant-based meat alternatives around the world | Litcius