New food

A global focus on safe, secure nutrition for all

The emerging ‘new foods’ sector is creating alternatives to traditional agriculture that can produce environmentally more sustainable, healthy, safe and affordable sources of nutrition for billions of people around the world. Potential types of new foods include insect-derived proteins, plant-based meat alternatives, cultivated meats, and cell-derived enzymes, proteins, fats and other nutrients and functional molecules.

New food - people enjoying a meal

Meeting consumer demand for nutritious, sustainable and ethical food

At its foundation, new food embraces the basic principle and goal of feeding more people using fewer resources. One key focus is on reducing reliance on livestock-based agriculture, reducing waste, and reducing other stresses on the environment by harnessing new sources and production methods for generating plant-based dairy alternatives, alongside proteins, protein-rich foods, and other key nutrients.

Here are some examples of 'new food' types:

The food science "playground"

How food science and testing can bring new life to old traditions.

Ideas that could feed the world

On tomorrow’s menu: Dairy products made from fermented milk cells. Chicken breast filet produced in a bioreactor. Or food that is sourced literally out of thin air.

GEA Insights

Person using a tablet to inspect stainless‑steel industrial equipment with GEA‑branded valves and piping.

GEA Cloud: Connected Machines Powered by Industrial AI

Explore how GEA’s digitally enabled machines connect to the GEA Cloud to unlock AI-driven insights, improve uptime and drive sustainable industrial performance.

Transforming sidestreams into jet fuel

Transforming sidestreams into jet fuel

The aviation industry wants to use more sustainable aviation fuel, but supply is limited. To meet demand and secure cleaner air travel, suppliers need to unlock resources from existing sidestreams like fats and oils. How to scale up? That’s where GEA comes in.

In 1926, Ramesohl & Schmidt (later Westfalia Separator AG) launched their first bucket milking system. The Kirchhoff family was among the first to use it on their farm in Germany.

From milking bucket to robot: 100 years of farm innovation at GEA

For more than 100 years, GEA has developed technologies for dairy farming – from the first bucket milking machines to autonomous, digitally connected systems. These innovations have fundamentally transformed dairy farming: away from labor-intensive routines, toward greater productivity, animal welfare and more efficient day-to-day operations.

Products & Technologies

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