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In It Together: #ImpossibleCommunity

By Jessica Appelgren, Vice President of Communications, Impossible Foods

Man loading boxed of Impossible Food and Impossible Burger from truck Plant Based Meat Alternatives

I first visited the Alameda County Community Food Bank in 2016, shortly after the spectacular launch of the Impossible™ Burger at Momofuku Nishi in New York City. During that first meeting, food bank leaders taught me about the “protein gap” -- a severe shortage of quality protein at food banks nationwide. I haven’t stopped thinking about it since.

Back in 2016, Impossible Burger was a nichy fascination with upscale culinary trendsetters -- a scarce resource that generated lines around the block in Manhattan. But our mission was (and is) to be everywhere (opens in a new tab)-- and we knew that, as we grew, we could meaningfully help close the protein gap. 

So four years ago, we committed to donating Impossible Burger to the Alameda County Community Food Bank to help an estimated 1 in 5 local residents who experience food insecurity. In short order, we expanded our food bank program to include Second Harvest (across the San Francisco Bay in San Mateo and Santa Clara counties) and additional food banks close to the sites where Impossible Burger is produced, in both California and the Midwest. 

Then COVID-19 changed the world -- with devastating consequences for millions of Americans. The pandemic greatly exacerbated the already tenuous situation food banks face -- a perfect storm of trouble, one that will likely persist long after shelter-in-place orders are relaxed.

As unemployment reaches levels not seen since the Great Depression(opens in a new tab), food banks are seeing lines that stretch more than a mile long(opens in a new tab). In addition, with stockpiling of grocery store ingredients and greater demand from people cooking at home, retailers don’t have as many shelf-stable or frozen foods to donate. 

Even worse: One of the first and hardest industries hit by COVID-19 was the restaurant sector -- which had to lay off hundreds of thousands of workers, including those who could have ordinarily counted on free or subsidized meals from employers. As schools closed down to comply with shelter-in-place orders, children couldn’t rely as much on free or subsidized breakfast and lunch programs. And as fears of COVID-19 transmission spread, food banks saw their largely volunteer workforces shrink. 

Food banks flexed their entrepreneurial muscle and, like many for-profit companies, pivoted to new business models. Alameda County Community Food Bank launched a “contactless” drive-through distribution center meant to serve 30 households; within a week, it was feeding more than 700 households. The San Francisco Bay Area -- already one of the worst places in America for food insecurity due to its gaping wealth gap and extreme housing prices -- saw food bank demand hit unprecedented levels(opens in a new tab)

In March, Impossible Foods initiated a campaign called #ImpossibleCommunity, with an initial donation of 83,000 pounds of Impossible Burger to Alameda County Community Food Bank. Almost immediately, we began getting calls from other food banks, as well as from long-standing partners, including chefs and restaurateurs who wanted to send Impossible Burgers to the frontlines -- to hospitals and medical workers in hard-hit places including New York City, Seattle and Florida. 

Our management team quickly and unanimously agreed we needed to expand our food bank program -- and fast. In addition to increasing our food bank donations, we agreed to provide Impossible Burgers to people feeding the frontlines when possible, given the logistics constraints and staffing shortages that many companies face. 

We made a pledge: Every week for the next two months, Impossible Foods is donating 10,000 pounds of Impossible Burger to food banks and other organizations feeding the frontlines and nourishing America’s most at-risk communities. 

Impossible Foods’ mission is to make the global food system sustainable. If successful, we will reverse the clock on climate change, restore biodiversity and expand natural ecosystems(opens in a new tab) -- results that will literally transform the way earth looks from space. Yet as an essential business in an unprecedented challenging time, we also exist to serve the most basic and immediate needs of our community -- including the food insecurity crisis plaguing both our hometown region of the San Francisco Bay Area and communities throughout America.

Since the start of the pandemic, our cross-functional “social good” team has gotten Impossible Burger to the following organizations and causes:

If you want to join the growing list of organizations in our ecosystem, please let us know by filling out this form(opens in a new tab). Given the constraints and staffing shortages facing logistics companies, Impossible Foods can only donate bulk foodservice product -- and keep in mind that Impossible Foods makes plant-based meat, not finished meals. (We get quite a few requests to serve cooked Impossible Burger; unfortunately, we aren’t a catering company.) 

While no company alone can get food to everyone in need, we are doing our part to help the amazing people feeding the frontlines and caring for our communities’ most vulnerable members. 

We sincerely thank you for all you are doing every day! You are the true heroes, and you inspire us to do better.

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