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Lethbridge Set to Welcome New Developments Despite High Construction Costs

Photo by: Foster Isiche on Unsplash

Lethbridge is set to see a steady construction and investment market in 2023, despite headwinds that will keep activity in check during the first half of the year.

“Avison Young is optimistic for Lethbridge as we move into 2023 with several new developments proposed and set to commence,” said Jeremy Roden, executive vice-president in Avison Young’s Lethbridge office. “We will see a complete redevelopment of Warehouse Square which is a retail and office development, as well as future residential and commercial phases at Crossings, and Frontier Business Park, which is an industrial development – to name a few.”

Projects set to complete this year include the new Lethbridge & District Exhibition Agri-Food Hub and Trade Centre, a $70.6 million event facility that will support the growth of the Alberta agri-food sector.

Avison Young notes that Lethbridge is insulated from the recessionary influences dogging other markets due to a diversified economy focused on agri-food production and benefitting from oil and gas projects.

 

According to the Alberta major projects inventory, Lethbridge has $173.1 million worth of projects under construction and $175.1 million worth in the planning stages.

The single largest project yet to commence is PIP International Inc.’s yellow pea processing facility, valued at $150 million. When complete, it will handle 126,000 tonnes of yellow peas annually from local and regional growers.

The project follows the opening of a pilot facility last year on the former site of Coulee Brewing Co.

High construction costs have dampened activity, however.

“The local market has cooled in response to increased inflation and interest rates,” said Doug Mereska, managing director for Avison Young in Lethbridge, noting that many developers have had to factor unexpected increases in costs into their construction budgets.

Some are addressing the issue by avoiding the use of steel, which has yet to see prices fall from their peak last summer, whereas the cost of drywall and wood have fallen.

“More buildings may be built with wood that would typically have been built with steel,” Avison Young reported.
While high construction costs are often passed onto purchasers or affect what tenants pay, commercial rental rates in Lethbridge remain lower on average than many other communities. This has made it an attractive destination for builders.

Base office rents currently average $15.15 per square foot while industrial space averages $8.56. Calgary space, by contrast averages $17.85 per square foot for office and $10.58 for industrial.

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New Sales Opportunity for Pea Producers

Orders are coming in from around the world for PIP International’s new all-natural plant-based pea protein.

PIP International is an ag tech company based out of Lethbridge focusing in on pea processing.

CEO Christine Lewington says they’ve cracked the code and developed a pea-based protein that promises to revolutionize plant-based food products.

They’ve been able to remove the protein from the pea while leaving the starch and fibre behind.

“Our protein has high functionality, so it gels well, and binds well. It’s 100% soluble. So you can put it in beverages, and it’s completely dissolved and it stays dissolved. That’s very unique about our protein as well. So you can up the protein content. I mean, we put it in our water here at PIP, so we have protein water. Just for fun, we’ve made ice creams that are very smooth, because the other protein has a very bad texture. It’s grainy, you can taste it, and consumers don’t like that.  So the bad taste, the bitter, the grainy, the poor functionality. We’ve solved that. And we’ve often said we’ve cracked the code, we figured out how to do that in a more cost-effective way, which therefore provides to the consumer an affordable plant-based option. That tastes great.”

 

So far, PIP has already garnered support from the Canadian government and interest from South Korea. 

As well, 39 private companies have also entered or are negotiating contracts with the company to use its product. 

“They use our protein as an ingredient. So they come to us and we have just commissioned our pilot facility in Lethbridge.  We just got an order for 150 metric tons today and that’s 15 pallets. They take that and they put it into their processing lines and they develop products around it.”

Lewington points out that because their pea protein is now so highly functional, one client has been able to remove four of their ingredients and replaced it with PIP’s food proteins.

In June, the company received $1 million from the Alberta government towards a $20-million pea-processing pilot facility in Lethbridge, where they bought a craft brewery.

 

In just a few short months they converted it into a wet fractionation processing facility, and the first shipment out of that plant leaves today.

The plant is now a fully continuous automated processing facility at a small scale, processing over 5000 metric tons of peas and turning out over 1000 metric tons of pea protein.

She notes they had started ground work previously on a much larger $150-million processing facility, but put that on hold so they could expand the current pilot facility and get the product out the door immediately to end-use customers.

Lewington says they hope to begin focusing on the detailed engineering for the larger plant by the end of January.

Once the larger processing plant is complete they will be able to increase the company’s production to 126,000 tonnes per year of yellow peas, which would make it the highest capacity plant of any facility in the world. 

 

She points out that with the growing demand for their pea protein, they need a constant supply of raw products.

PIP International has partnered with Monette Farms at Swift Current (Saskatchewan) to negotiate and source all raw products from farmers in  Saskatchewan and Alberta.

“So farmers, I’ll be able to direct to Monette Farms and they’ll handle the contracts. Monette Farms just guarantees PIP that they are going to get, you know, peas on this day, this time, and in this specification. So it’s a great partnership.”

Lewington says farmers in Saskatchewan and Alberta are really going to win on this, it’s over $100 million in direct to the farmer in sales and contracts. 

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Christine Lewington: A Trendsetter Promoting Enjoyable and Affordable Plant-Based Foods

The food industry has witnessed a plethora of changes in the past few years. It has advanced in a few areas like plant-based products, accelerating efficiencies in farming operations and crop techniques, and regenerative farming practices. While the industry has increased demands for progress and innovations, improvements that bring out a major change are necessary. Witnessing all the changes, women, the important pillars of the food industry and economy, are playing a big role in developing the market. Though women contribute 40 percent of the global agricultural workforce, they are still underrepresented and face significant barriers in senior leadership positions. Breaking these boundaries, Christine Lewington (CEO, PIP International Inc.) is uniquely contributing to the Agri-processing sector.

A Remarkable Journey

 

An ambitious and focused entrepreneur, Christine, is also a thought leader. She has an amazing career journey which she shared when speaking exclusively with Mirror Review. Christine was born and raised in Southern Alberta, Canada. The region where she was nurtured was the agriculture sector with over 100 food processing facilities. Moreover, she spent her life around food processing and farming; in short, agriculture is a way of life for her.

Speaking about her entrepreneurial driven career, Christine shares her amazing 20-year journey. To enhance her mechanical engineering degree from Brigham Young University, Idaho, Christine further developed a diversified skillset and has been a Project Manager Professional, PMP, for over 20 years. Over the course of these 20 years, she has managed and directed innovative and complex projects. She spent more than 10 years leading projects for a large multinational food company, where she won their coveted national project manager award. Projects including automation, sustainability, capacity growth, raw supply, warehousing, packaging, commercialization, and the construction thereof, developed her sharp leadership skills. Later, she worked with other multinational food companies and learned various aspects of business operations and how to successfully navigate finances, human resources, government relations and external stakeholders.

Moral Support and Inspiration

 

Life is challenging and one must handle crises with confidence and courage. Along with these, moral support is also a necessary aspect that boosts confidence as well as helps to build different perspectives. Christine has also been blessed with great mentors who changed her life in a positive way. “One of my early mentors, who passed away recently, taught me to always seek to see things from different perspectives to create new possibilities,” says Christine. These lessons led her to learn how to innovate and grow as a person as well.

Establishment of PIP International

 

PIP International was founded in 2020 with the signing of a master license agreement for the rights to commercialize a new and innovative yellow pea protein extraction technology. Located in Lethbridge, Alberta Canada, PIP is strategically situated in the heart of where yellow peas are grown. Recently, PIP commissioned Phase One and enters the market processing over 5000MT of yellow peas annually. The company is now testing large markets with their pea protein isolate and is set to achieve the goal of Phase Two by scaling to thousands of metric tons of production capacity in 2024.

With the vision to lead the protein revolution by creating the most sustainable and affordable plant protein, PIP uses industry-disrupting technologies to make this a reality. The company wishes to significantly heal the world by offering nutritious, great tasting, neutral color, and high-functioning pea protein while it reduces the impact on the earth. “No other pea protein comes close to what PIP’s Ultimate Pea Protein called UP.P™ can do,” says Christine. As word gets out that PIP’s pea protein isolate has superior taste and functionality, manufacturers from around the world reach out daily wanting to develop new delicious-tasting products for their diverse food portfolios.

Current Scenario of the Industry

 

Consumers shy away from choosing plant-based products because of the poor taste. This has slowed growth in the plant-based industry as it faces a lack of broad consumer acceptance. People want to enjoy their food and will not transition or choose plant-based options if they do not taste good. PIP comes into the picture to revolutionize the industry by providing enjoyable and great tasting options. PIP’s new extraction technology consistently offers a great-tasting, high-functioning, and affordable plant protein processed sustainability from yellow peas. In addition, by using several cross-industry advanced energy initiatives, PIP aims to showcase as a net zero processor and leader by example.

Impossible to Possible

 

Christine is a decorated leader who is contributing to the global protein crisis and helping to fulfill the requirement for protein as well as supporting the global supply chain. Being in a leadership position, she takes on various responsibilities to ensure the company’s development. She is always on the lookout for exciting and collaborative opportunities across various disciplines. Especially, she invests her efforts in networking with partners with strategic planning and innovative ideas. She thrives making impossible things possible.

Being a decorated woman leader, Christine has faced many difficulties. She thinks that the most challenging task while serving as a leader is raising capital to sustain a new start-up and aligning it with the monthly cash flow demands. As per statistics, less than 3% of all VC funds are invested in women entrepreneurs. However, Christine dealt with these problems bravely using her long history and successful track record of managing large complex projects and delivering them on time and within budget to gain investor confidence. By first providing evidence of PIP’s innovations and their success, it has validated PIP’s vision and attracted further interest and commitments from investors.

With respect to PIP’s development and growth, the demand for its products is outpacing its forecast. For her relentless efforts and innovative ideas, Christine deserves acknowledgment of her work. “Awards are not something I seek and shy away from as I credit my team as the reason for PIP’s success,” she adds.

Technology Incorporation

 

Under Christine’s guidance, PIP has gone from a PowerPoint business presentation to a fully operational, automated, one-of-a-kind pea protein isolate extraction facility in one year. Moreover, the emergence of new Ag-technologies and incorporation of the same has helped the company grow leaps and bounds. PIP solely focuses on the Business to Business (B2B) industry as a premium food ingredient at an affordable price. Recently Christine is considering a direct Business to Consumer (B2C) offer as several parties have requested PIP provide their Ultimate Pea Protein, called UP.P™, as single-serving offers via the company’s website.

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The Business Enquirer: PEOPLE OF THE YEAR 2022

2022 has been another challengin year for business. In general, supply chains have been affected by… Read More:
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Oats, Peas, Canola at High Demand for Protein-Rich Diets and Sustainable Food Trends

Due to new trends in protein-rich diets and environmentally friendly and sustainable food or eating practices, oats, peas, and canola are in high demand.

The demand for particular foods among consumers has made it possible for northern Plains farmers to sell their products in more markets.

Field peas, oats, and canola, which are produced on varying acreages in Minnesota, North Dakota, and South Dakota, have seen price increases due to increased demand.

Consumer Demands

Near Wolford, North Dakota, Paul and Diane Overby run Lee Farms, where they cultivate 1,300 acres with these three crops as well as sunflowers, hard red spring wheat, flax, and soybeans. They grow seven to eight grain and row crops rather than large fields of two to three different crops.

The fields used by the Overbys to grow their crops are typically 70 acres in size, which is at least half the area of the fields used by many farmers to grow conventional crops like corn. The couple’s 1,300 acres of farmable land allow them to grow more than six different crops, necessitating the smaller fields.

The Overbys have experimented with a number of crops over the years. A few, like fava beans, are no longer grown, but the majority are now consistently included in their rotations.

According to Overby, food companies have contracted with farmers for acreage in order to ensure that they can meet the rising demand for certain foods as consumer demand has increased.

Contracting Prices

About half of the Overby family’s contracted field pea, canola, oat, sunflower, and flax acres for 2023 have already been planted. Overby’s price risk is reduced by contracting the acreage. They are not forced to rely on the cash market because they know their set price going into the growing season. The Overbys anticipated starting to lock in their next price in the upcoming month.

Protein-Rich Demand

Yellow field peas have the potential to become a highly sought-after crop in the world of specialty crops. According to PIP International’s CEO Christina Lewington, a new method of extracting pea protein will revolutionize plant-based proteins and give farmers more opportunities to market their yellow pea crop.

PIP International is an agricultural technology company in Alberta. The company’s method of extracting proteins, which differs significantly from those employed by other businesses, was developed in the pharmaceutical sector, according to Lewington.

In contrast to other pea proteins, which aren’t always tasty, the company’s method of extracting the protein yields a product with a “good clean taste,” according to Lewington.

According to the CEO, the pea protein will be extremely functional for use in all industries, including beverages.

Niche Crops

According to Overby, growing niche crops may offer opportunities for small farmers to remain profitable. The couple also thinks it may offer young people who want to start farming cheaply a way to grow their crops sustainably as well as connect with consumers, The Dickinson Press reports.

In 2021, Medical News Today listed 15 best plant-based foods that are high in protein. Their list includes, tofu, lentils, chickpeas, spirulina, quinoa, chia seeds, hemp seeds, and beans. In October of this year, Everyday Health published a medically reviewed list of 10 plant-based sources of protein, which includes lentils, chickpeas, hemp seeds, and tofu, among others. The demand for these food products are shaping niche farms that produce niche crops.

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From High Protein to Sustainability, Food Trends Drive Demand for Niche Crops: Pea Protein Potential

Yellow field peas have potential to become a hot commodity in the specialty crops world.

PIP International, an agricultural technology company in Alberta, has developed a new method of extraction of pea protein which CEO Christine Lewington believes will revolutionize plant-based proteins and result in more opportunities for farmers to market their yellow pea crop.

The company’s protein extraction process, which is significantly different from other protein extraction processes that other companies use, comes from the pharmaceutical industry, Lewington said. Her company used technology from the pharmaceutical industry, applied a “twist” on it and built its own equipment to extract the pea protein.

PIP International, which plans to contract for acreage with farmers in Saskatchewan and western North Dakota, has a $20 million pilot pea processing plant in Lethbridge, Alberta, which was in part funded by a $1 million grant from the Alberta government. PIP International plans to begin construction on a $150 million processing plant in the next few months.

The company has the ability to expand to process 126,000 metric tons of yellow peas per year which would be the highest capacity of any facility in the world.

The company’s unique process has caught the eye of 39 private food companies that are negotiating with PIP International for use of its product, the company said.

The company’s process to extract the protein results in a product that has a “good clean taste” that is unlike any other pea proteins, which aren’t always palatable, Lewington said.

“They smell bad. They taste bad. They look bad,” she said.

The pea protein will be highly functional for use across all sectors, including beverages, Lewington said.

“For farmers, I can now give them a long-term contract to grow my peas,” she said.

PIP International is in the process of negotiating contracts, which are well above the market price of $10.50 per bushel in Canadian currency, with North Dakota farmers.

Raising niche crops has potential to provide opportunities for small farmers to stay viable, Overby said.

He also believes it could provide young people, who want to grow their crops sustainably and connect with consumers a less costly way to get into farming.

“The opportunities are better now than I’ve seen in my 30 years of farming and I hope they continue in North Dakota,” Overby said.

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Christine Lewington: A New Solution for the Global Protein Crisis

To the meat lovers’ chagrin, the verdict is that – animal-based foods contribute twice as much to global greenhouse gas emissions as plant-based foods do. According to a study in Nature Food, 57% of total emissions result from animal-based food production.

Some types of production are more to blame than others. Beef production, for example, accounts for a quarter of all animal-based food-related emissions. Hence, navigating away from animal-based food production towards plant-based, seems a viable way to reduce the emissions from our overall food production industry.

Still, there are plenty of challenges on that road ahead. Rising costs of production and the negative public perception that plant-based alternatives seldomly taste as good as animal-based foods top the list of challenges needed to be solved by plant-based food manufacturers.

Christine Lewington is tackling these and other issues. As the founder and CEO ofPIP International, an Agri-tech company based in Lethbridge, Alberta, Canada, she has more than twenty years of experience in the industry. With her team at PIP International, she’s solving some of the biggest problems facing the plant-based protein industry.

“We chose to focus on yellow peas as they provide a near perfect amino-acid profile and have the best nutritional profile of legume options. Still, it’s not the king of everything. People don’t like it,” she explains. “And the driving reason for the dislike is the bad taste. If you’ve ever tasted pea protein, the harsh bitterness will stop you from coming back for more. I knew if we could solve the taste, the colour and not damage the protein when extracting it, then the major problems with pea protein would be gone, thereby creating limitless opportunity.”

The solution she found will revolutionize the plant-based protein world. Thanks to a novel extraction process developed by a European tech house, PIP International has managed to produce the world’s first tasteless, colourless and easiest to use yellow pea protein isolate.

“Our new extraction process leaves the protein undamaged so that we deliver our pea isolate to companies in a near-natural state,” Christine Lewington explains. “Our in-house product development team has easily created ice cream, fudge, biscuits, beverages, cheese spreads, coffee creamers and more. All of them taste great, because our protein has a neutral taste and is easy to use.”

PIP International’s breakthrough comes at a critical moment. With the world’s population reaching eight billion and, on its way to hitting the ten-billion mark in the next few decades, ramping up food production to keep the current consumption levels will be challenging. For protein specifically, the situation is even direr, as any increase in animal-based food production puts the world further off course from meeting greenhouse gas emission targets.

“The world is in already in protein crisis and we need significantly more,” says Christine Lewington. “The search for viable protein sources is crucial. We’re offering a protein isolate that won’t turn off customers after their first taste, as most current products do. Plant-based products need to taste great so they come back for more!”

Besides solving the taste issue, PIP International has also successfully created its pea protein isolate at a lower cost. Through a combination of cross-industry production processes, the company’s cost-saving methods allows it to offer their protein at lower than market pricing.

“Innovations have allowed us to reduce processing time, save significant energy costs, and produce a plant-protein with flexible attributes, thanks to new technologies,” Christine Lewington explains. “The result is a premium product without the premium price.”

PIP International has already been getting plenty of attention. In less than 12 months, the company has reached $7 million in orders and catapulted from being a PowerPoint presentation a $30 million production facility. The plan is to grow steady but aggressively – the demand is growing, the product is excellent, and investors and potential buyers have been flocking to the company. The company already has support from the Canadian government.
“We have a strong interest from Korea, too – their government is looking for alternatives to soy protein, and our pea protein product caught their eye,” Christine Lewington explains. “But that’s to be expected – the need for quality plant-based protein exists worldwide, so any company willing to rise to the challenge of producing it needs to think and act internationally.”

So far, Christine Lewington and PIP International have had their premium protein evaluated by dozens of companies, with all of them coming back to strike a deal. With the large-scale production facility on track to open in 2024, PIP International will be able to position itself as one of the leading actors in the market. The product is there, as is the low cost of production.

“We like to say that we’ve cracked the code with our pea protein and created something the world needs and at a price that doesn’t make it prohibitive to use” Christine Lewington. “By pairing the great taste with an affordability advantage, we are on the leading edge for our yellow pea protein isolate to revolutionize the plant-based food industry.”

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New Technology Levels UP.P™ Plant Proteins

Thanks to PIP (Protein Isolate Plant) International’s disruptive technology, it’s pea protein is set to be the market leader. The technology has finally cracked the code on pea protein’s poor taste, colour, texture and compromised performance. It aims to drive industry standards… Read More: Page 98
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Alberta Could Be Global Powerhouse for Plant-Based Foods but More Support Needed: Industry Insiders

From grocery store aisles to restaurant menus, consumers around the world are being offered more and more plant-based options when it comes to dishes rich in protein. And based on the success of plant-based meat substitutes like those offered by Beyond Meat, whose entry into the stock market three years ago sent investors into a frenzy, the sector is a lucrative one with plenty of room to grow.

With an increasing consumer demand, and possibly need, for plant-based protein, could Alberta become a global leader in supplying it? Canada is already the planet’s largest producer of dry peas and lentils. At 4.6 million tons in 2017 alone, the country is also a global power in terms of the production and exportation of pulses. In terms of producing the crops needed, Alberta appears ripe to capitalize on the opportunity.

READ MORE: Beyond Meat launching in Canadian stores amid race to build a better veggie burger

“There’s been very few trends in the food industry in the last 25 years that have given this level of opportunity,” says Bill Greuel, the CEO of Protein Industries Canada (PIC), a not-for-profit organization tasked with propelling Canada’s plant protein and plant-based product sector to becoming a major global provider.

“When you think about the stars that are aligning here (consumers seeking healthier food options, diets that have less negative impact on the environment and animals)… growth of the plant-based food sector is real, and it’s growing at an unprecedented rate.” 

The federal government anticipates the sector will deliver $10 billion in GDP impact over 10 years, along with over 4,500 jobs in the same time frame.

READ MORE: Federal government gives additional $750M for Canadian superclusters

While Alberta is not a Canadian leader when it comes to soybean production, it is when it comes to the production of pulses: chickpeas, lentils and perhaps most importantly — because of their increasing popularity as a plant-based food ingredient — dry peas.

According to crop production projections released by Agriculture Canada last month, Alberta is expected to make up 41 percent of dry pea production in the country in 2022-23. Alberta is expected to account for the second-largest share in terms of dry pea, lentil and chickpea production. Production of all three crops is expected to increase significantly in Canada compared to a year earlier.

But when it comes to processing those raw materials to create plant-based food products or the ingredients needed to do so, Alberta has yet to stake its claim as a leader.

Allison Ammeter is a grain farmer who also serves as director of the Alberta Pulse Growers Commission, a non-profit that advocates on behalf of thousands of farmers. She served as chair of the Plant Protein Alliance of Alberta (PPAA) until it ceased operations last year.

She believes Alberta needs to “get into the industry in a big way while there’s still room to get in.”

“I would say five or even 10 years from now, there will be all the plants built for the current need. Not right now — we’re nowhere near close to that.”

“It’s this whole ecosystem that we are giving away,” says Christine Lewington, the CEO and founder of PIP International, an Alberta-based agri-tech company producing pea protein.

READ MORE: Alberta has highest food insecurity rate among Canadian provinces: report

She adds that with increasing attention being drawn to the issue of food security, the ability to offer plant protein is a selling point.

“We have that in Alberta,” Lewington says. “Europe is all over food security.

“We bring in our finished products in Alberta… We don’t value-create here.”

Ammeter suggests Alberta could be on the cusp of capitalizing on the explosion of demand for the product, drawing an analogy to growth in the province’s oil industry in the middle of the 20th century.

“They unlocked the oil industry by bringing in the money,” Ammeter says. “We will unlock our industry when we have the investment.”

‘Let people know what the potential is’

In a bid to boost innovation in the economy, the federal government announced in 2018 it had selected five innovation superclusters, one of which was the protein industry. This led to the creation of PIC.

“There’s a lot of upside potential and excitement (in Alberta),” Greuel says. “It’s pretty favourable from an operating perspective.”

He cites Alberta’s low corporate tax rate and availability of land and feedstock as advantages the province has in trying to grow the sector. He also says Alberta has “lots to offer in terms of innovative farmers.”

READ MORE: Business leaders believe protein supercluster will ‘turbo-charge’ agriculture investment

The PPAA used to advocate for the sector and help facilitate its growth in Alberta. It ceased operations after the provincial government announced last year it would not continue to provide it with $250,000 in annual funding, a move Ammeter says “spoke volumes” to a lot of people.

Ammeter believes Alberta’s government can play an important role in helping the sector reach its potential.

“I would like to see our government saying, ‘We have this incredible natural resource… We are going to do everything we can to promote value-add in Alberta.’”

‘We think the global market for plant-based foods is going to be about $250 billion’

A 2019 analysis conducted by the National Research Council of Canada found that “annual global sales of plant-based meat alternatives have grown on average eight per cent a year since 2010, with projections forecasting that, in 25 years, 20 per cent of meat will consist of plant-based and clean meat.”

The NRC forecasted that global revenues when it comes to plant-based dairy substitutes will reach USD$34 billion in 2024 and added the plant-based beverage market also continues to grow significantly.

“In Canada, sales of plant-based protein products rose seven per cent to more than $1.5 billion in the 2016-17 fiscal year,” the report reads.

READ MORE: Global plant protein summit lands in Saskatoon

A report for the federal government recently found over 40 per cent of Canadians are “actively trying to incorporate more plant-based foods into their diets.”

“If you’re looking at grocery stores’ sales of plant-based food, that has increased considerably over the last five years,” Greuel says.

But some point out the sector’s rise has not been immune to peaks and valleys. For example, in a fourth-quarter financial report released early this year, Maple Leaf Foods noted sales from its plant-based division saw a decline of 4.7 per cent in 2021, even though it generated more than $184 million in sales for the year.

“While work is continuing, analysis to date demonstrates a clear slowdown in projected growth rate for the overall category compared to very high growth rates predicted in 2019,” the Maple Leaf report reads.

Greuel acknowledges that since the COVID-19 pandemic hit, growth figures may have “softened to some degree” but adds the sector is “still seeing year-over-year growth.”

“When you think about that, we’re going to need startup companies (and) ingredient-manufacturing companies setting up shop,” he says. “We think the global market for plant-based foods is going to be about $250 billion… Our goal is that Canada owns 10 per cent of that global market.

“You could say that’s an aspirational goal.”

Lewington believes the plant-based food market’s growth could be at risk of temporarily stalling because “there’s no availability to increase and grow the market” as a result of insufficient capacity to process the protein needed for plant-based food products.

READ MORE: Edmonton’s Nabati Foods hoping to bring its vegan ‘Eggz’ to stores around the world

“Manufacturers are being rationed,” she says. “When you can’t grow, consumers pull back.

“Before demand, you need to create a need. To create a need, you need to create capacity.”

Lewington says one of the keys to successfully growing the plant-protein processing sector in Alberta will be for producers to be able to assure companies they can keep up with supply needs as demand for those companies’ products grows.

‘We truly have a great new product’

Plans for two major plant-protein processing facilities in Alberta were announced in May: Phyto Organix Foods Inc. revealed plans for a $225-million wet fractionation plant in the Strathmore area while PIP International offered details on plans for a $20-million pea-processing pilot facility in Lethbridge.

“This is Alberta pea country,” Chris Theal, Phyto Organix’s founder and president, told Global News at the time, noting the plant’s location offers an opportunity to see output grow over time. “We’ve got roughly five times our capacity within 75 kilometres of the facility. We range out to 150 kilometres (and) we’ve got 10 times our capacity.”

Plant fractionation facilities use a process that separates grains or pulses into fibre, starch and protein, the latter of which can be used as an ingredient in plant-based foods and beverages.

“Getting projects like ours up and running successfully shows others it can be done,” Theal says. “The resource is there — it’s getting the right people and capital in place, including government grants and loans.”

Lewington’s excitement is evident when she speaks about her company’s facility.

“We truly have a great new product,” she explains. “Clean tasting, premium protein that they (plant-based food companies) can actually functionalize.”

READ MORE: Arrival of vegan chains signals changing appetites in Alberta’s capital

Lewington says to attract the necessary investment to grow, her facility is opening in phases.

Phase 1 is a pilot facility that will still deliver tons of product before scaling up for Phase 2, a $150-million yellow pea protein facility she says will be able to create 100 new jobs, process about 126,000 tons of yellow peas each year and support over $75 million in annual pea contracts for regional growers.

“We’re demonstrating that we can do what we say we do,” Lewington says of Phase 1, which began producing product this fall. She says Phase 2 is headed to detailed engineering by the end of the year and construction is anticipated to begin in the spring of 2023.

“We are raising money. I am open to finding the right partner,” she says, adding she believes the province could do more to help industry players achieve their goals.

She acknowledges Phase 1 of her project received $1 million in funding from the province, something she is grateful for, but notes the cost of getting Phase 1 off the ground is $25 million.

‘Getting the capital lined up is certainly a challenge’

Access to capital is seen as a major challenge when it comes to trying to get plant-protein processing facilities up and running.

“(It is) far and away the No.1 issue,” Greuel says. “Processing facilities for protein extraction are very capital intensive.”

He notes most plant-protein facilities cost between $200 million and $600 million to build.

“It’s a real struggle,” Ammeter says of accessing capital. “The money is all around… (we just need) to let people know what the potential is.”

She would like to see the province backstop loans for proposed plants so they are better able to secure funding from institutions like Farm Credit Canada (FCC) or the Agriculture Financial Services Corp. (AFSC)

“I’m not asking for handouts,” she says. “Do what they’re already doing in a number of other industries.”

READ MORE: Edmonton’s vegan restaurant scene continues to grow

Ammeter says she believes Saskatchewan and Manitoba are doing more to make “value-add a priority” when it comes to leveraging their ability to produce pulses to try and help fractionation plants get off the ground. She says when governments do more to help the sector, investors take notice.

Ammeter calls it a missed opportunity that so much raw product from Prairie growers is being sold overseas.

“It’s not good for Canada’s GDP,” she says, adding she believes an investment tax credit geared towards the sector would help.

“The plant-protein space in Alberta is going to suffer because it does not get the support it does in other provinces,” Lewington says. “Saskatchewan and Manitoba are very aggressive.”

READ MORE: Massive new Manitoba facility to feed demand for pea protein

Like Ammeter, she would also like to see the province backstop loans.

“(It would allow entities like FCC and AFSC to) provide loans where we don’t have to provide personal guarantees — because they scare off investors,” she says. “The more creative you get, the more risk equity investors see.

“If I could take a loan guarantee with a syndicate and show investors there is no personal guarantee, they’re in all day long.”

Ammeter believes there is another challenge when it comes to securing financing. She says banks “are not nearly as quick or capable of evaluating” proposed projects as they are with proposals in other sectors.

Greuel says PIC is working to educate investors about the sector in an effort to loosen more capital.

“Canada is a natural place for investment for ingredient manufacturing,” he says. “Universities have taken notice of this (sector and are)… looking at training to create this talent.”

Lewington also notes the need for more skilled labour for the province’s plant-protein sector to truly take off. She says she is glad to see Alberta taking steps to make it easier to bring in foreign skilled workers in areas where there is a shortage of them.

Despite the challenges, Greuel says he believes there is recognition among all governments about the importance of Canada taking “ownership of this space.”

READ MORE: Beyond Meat partners with Portage la Prairie bound pea-processing plant

Lewington believes growing the industry in Alberta is a time-sensitive endeavour.

“When you play with time, anything can happen,” she says, adding the industry will benefit growers and all Albertans through jobs and tax revenue. “From the heydays of Beyond Meat coming to market… Those days aren’t the same anymore.”

“There is a real sense of urgency for Canada here,” Greuel says of Canada’s plant-protein aspirations.

Lewington says she worries that if Alberta does not more aggressively pursue growth in the industry, larger producers will simply begin expanding existing facilities elsewhere in the country.

READ MORE: Pea protein company puts down roots with new Lethbridge facility

Global News made multiple requests for an interview with Agriculture, Forestry and Rural Economic Development Minister Nate Horner about the state of the industry in Alberta but he was not made available.

Horner attended Phyto Organix’s media event to announce its Strathmore plant in May. At the time, he said “this is something we really want to double down on.”

“I know as a farmer, before I got involved in politics, I wanted to see this,” he said. “I wanted to see more of what we’re seeing in Saskatchewan and other jurisdictions. Let’s value add here close to home — and with all the issues with supply chains and resiliency, it really brings that even more to the forefront.

“We’re trying to work as Team Alberta to land these investments… if it’s ag-related and it’s value-added, we’re trying to land it.”

Horner suggested he believes the challenge when it comes to securing funding for such projects relates to the state of the global economy.

“The world is so crazy right now,” he said. “You’ve seen commodity prices spike and stay at those elevated levels — fuel… the inflation costs on the actual construction — so it has delayed some of these announcements.

“But the upside is still there.”

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La visionaria empresa canadiense de tecnología agrícola PIP International lanza una tecnología innovadora

October 5, 2022: Notimerica, “La visionaria empresa canadiense de tecnología agrícola PIP International lanza una tecnología innovadora.”

 

La visionaria empresa canadiense de tecnología agrícola PIP International lanza una tecnología innovadora

LETHBRIDGE, AB, 10 de mayo de 2022 /PRNewswire/ — PIP International (PIP), empresa canadiense dedicada a la elaboración de productos a base de plantas, ha anunciado hoy un innovador avance tecnológico en el campo de las proteínas vegetales. La innovadora tecnología ha descifrado por fin el código de sabor, color, textura y rendimiento comprometidos de la proteína del guisante, impulsando los estándares de la industria “UP” y el potencial para cambiar el disfrute de los consumidores de …

Leer más: https://www.notimerica.com/comunicados/noticia-comunicado-visionaria-empresa-canadiense-tecnologia-agricola-pip-international-lanza-tecnologia-innovadora-20220510225927.html

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