Motley Fool Money - The Global Cold Rush
Episode Date: June 30, 2024Nicola Twilley is the author of “Frostbite: How Refrigeration Changed Our Food, Our Planet, and Ourselves” and the co-host of Gastropod. Ricky Mulvey caught up with Twilley for a conversation abou...t: - The cold chain and our economy. - Finding investment opportunities inside of refrigerators. - And one reason why Unilever gave up on ice cream. - A new technology changing how we eat fruits and vegetables. Companies mentioned: COLD, WMT, UL, YUMC Host: Ricky Mulvey Guest: Nicola Twilley Producer: Mary Long Engineers: Desiree Jones, Chace Pryzlepa Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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So he's trying to figure out what these very poor people are going to do as they ascend to middle class status.
What are they going to buy so that he can invest in those companies and make money?
And the problem is we know that as people get richer, they change what they eat.
But when you ask them what they're going to eat, they're like, oh, no, no, no, I would still eat the same things.
I wouldn't change anything.
I'm Ricky Mulvey and that's Nicola Twilly, the author of Frostbite,
how refrigeration changed our food, our planet, and ourselves.
She's also the co-host of Gastropite.
We played a part of my conversation with Twilly on Friday's show.
It's about how the technology of refrigeration followed the Gartner hype cycle
because its history has some lessons for investors today.
If you haven't listened that first part, I recommend you listen when you can,
but if you haven't, today's show will make sense in and of itself.
I chat with Twilly about her experience inside the cold chain, what it's like working in refrigerated
warehouses. We also talk about why ice cream is especially tricky to handle and how an emerging
markets investor made money by checking the fridge.
We've been following the artificial cryosphere for a while now, and it's something that we come
in contact with in a very small form, maybe a refrigerators at home or the frozen food section
at a Walmart, but you've called it the third pole.
Can you give us a scope of the artificial cryosphere?
Yeah, I ended up calling it the artificial cryosphere to distinguish it from Earth's natural
cryosphere, so that's the ice caps at the Antarctic and the Arctic and the glaciers that are
increasingly shrinking.
And the irony, of course, is that as the natural cryosphere is shrinking, the artificial,
cryosphere, the places we've built for our food to live in, that's growing. It's already at over
5 billion cubic feet. That's huge. But it grew 20% between 2018 and 2020. There's a global
cold rush underway. So it's expanding at a extremely rapid rate, kind of as our natural
cryosphere shrinks. And I'm not just talking like you say about your home fridge.
or the walk-in at the restaurant or the freezer aisle at the supermarket,
I'm talking about these gigantic refrigerated warehouses and juice tanks and avocado ripening rooms
and meat lockers that most of us, even the most committed foodies and chefs,
will never have seen.
You saw the inside of a miracle, which is a real estate investment trust that is heavily involved
in the cold chain.
What was it like in your day working there?
What's it like to work inside of the cold chain?
I mean, this is going to make me sound stupid,
but it's really cold.
It's hard to exaggerate how cold it is.
Obviously, I figured it would be cold.
They kit you out.
I was working shifts in AmeriCold locations in Southern California.
So you show up.
It's this gorgeous day outside, as it is in Southern California.
Then you go and they catch you up with a refrigerator gear,
which is this special company that makes equipment for people who work in refrigerated warehouses.
It's called Iron Tough minus 50,
and it's supposed to keep you warm down to that temperature.
And it eats pretty great stuff, but let me tell you,
once your toes and your nose and your fingers get cold,
it's it's all over you're really cold i was told that you know a lot of folks they do their first shift
they leave at lunchtime they just they're just not okay with being that cold but yeah i america
is the second largest uh refrigerated warehouse provider in the world they're a global company
and i wanted to get a sense of what it is like to work and be in these spaces that we have built
for our food to live in, but we so rarely see inside. And so the way to do that is to work alongside
folks and get a sense for the rhythm, what goes in, what comes out, what it's actually like to work there.
What did you learn about the workers who stayed there longer than lunchtime? It seems like it takes
a special type of person to work for years in a refrigerated warehouse.
Yeah, my co-workers were really the best part.
of working in the cold. You do have to be a pretty tough individual. A lot of them end up saying,
oh, they love the cold. It keeps them young. I guessed one of them as being a full 10 years younger
than he actually was. And he was like, see, it's the cold. It preserves me. Just like it preserves your
milk, you know? So they, it's interesting. It's a terrible place to work if you wear glasses
because your glasses are constantly steaming up from the condensation as you change. You come out of the
cold room, into the cold room, into the freezer, out of the freezer. If you have a mustache,
you will grow icicles off that. So also a bad idea. Everyone gets sick. They all warned me
about that. Colds, sneezes, something called freezer flu. And there is actually a scientific reason
for that. You actually are more likely to catch a cold in the cold. It's a mechanism that
scientists have only just discovered there are these little bubbles in our noses that prevent the cold
virus from sort of settling and taking hold, and you make fewer of those bubbles in the cold.
So if you work in the cold, you're more likely to get sick. So that was kind of interesting.
It's a, I mean, you have to, you have to be sort of slow, steady, and patient because one of the
things that's interesting is, you know, the way cold preserves food is it slows down the metabolism,
of the things that are trying to eat our food. So all the bacteria and the fungi that are that are
trying to eat our food before we can, they, they have their metabolism slowed down in the cold.
Same with produce. It is breathing. It's a living thing and it breathes more slowly in the cold,
so it has more breaths before it dies. Hence, it's preserved for longer. But the cold also slows
humans down. So actually, however fast and sharp you think you are, I went into the cold storage
warehouse with my type A personality thinking I was going to ace this. And you just, they call it cold
stupid. You just operate more slowly in the cold. Everything does. Actually, you have to have special
computers, special equipment. You know, there are heaters on screens, the engine. The engine
oil gets kind of clogged up and sticky, so things work less well. Everything just kind of goes a little
slower in the cold, which makes a cold warehouse, one of the most dangerous working environments
in America. Warehouse work is already one of the more dangerous jobs. Add cold to that,
and it really is a dangerous and tough environment. You mentioned ice cream as well.
And one of the stories we saw earlier this year in the business world is that Unilever spun off
their ice cream division, which includes Ben and Jerry's.
A cold chain is difficult enough to take care of, but is there anything unique about
ice cream that makes it especially difficult to get through a cold chain into a freezer
in a grocery store?
Absolutely.
Ice cream is well known for being one of the trickiest items you can handle in the cold
chain, and there's a few reasons for that.
Okay, so first of all, for non-premium brands.
So for things like Turkey Hill or briars or things like that, a pint of ice cream is about half air.
When you buy that ice cream, half of it is air.
And that leads to a lot of logistical headaches because when you move that ice cream around the country,
it goes up and it goes down.
You know, there are mountain ranges, the Rockies, the Sierra Nevada's.
And what happens is at those higher elevations, air is thinner.
And so you get something called overflow or shrinkage.
And that's where because ice cream is 50% air, it will either collapse in on itself and pull away from the sides of the container or actually explode out and overflow and sort of have this kind of mushroom puffy top because that.
the air has expanded. So you actually can't truck ice cream from Washington State to Georgia because
of the Rockies. That's one thing. The other thing with a premium brand like Ben and Jerry's is
because you aren't using the kind of stabilizers and emulsifiers that you might use in a less
expensive brand, you are really relying on cold chain integrity to keep that ice cream from
crystallizing. Now, we've all had that experience when you keep a pint of ice cream in your freezer for
too long and it gets kind of crystalline around the top and the texture is gone and it's just not as
nice anymore. That's because your home freezer doesn't maintain these, the absolute perfect
temperature at all times. It lets that slight melt and refreeze and slight variations in temperature
that will cause those crystals to form. And if those crystals form, your ice cream is ruined.
So for someone like Unilever, trying to keep Ben and Jerry's absolutely smooth, creamy, dense, delicious, no crystals as they ship it around with none of the chemical aids that you might use, the stabilizers that would help, I can see why they got out of that business because, you know, I saw it even myself in working at a merri-cold. You pull a palette, you leave it on the loading dock. Well, the loading dock is at a different temperature.
in the freezer, then it goes into the truck.
But while the truck is being loaded, well, that might be a two-hour process, and the
temperature is fluctuating too.
So ice cream really needs white glove treatment, and that makes it a headache.
I think my main takeaway from that answer is that ice cream is 50% air, therefore it is
healthier than I think you've given me permission for a treat after this interview.
You don't need permission.
Treat yourself, do it.
There we go.
is one of the great gifts of the cold chain.
The cold chain is also allowed essentially the rise of Walmart's grocery business,
which you point out is 15% of all perishables sold in the United States.
It makes intuitive sense that Walmart's produce is cheaper than Whole Foods produce.
Some of that has to do with, I'm sure, the cost of having a huge supercenter versus
smaller grocery stores and maybe more expensive rent areas.
But how has the cold chain allowed Walmart's rise in essentially domination in grocery in the
United States?
Yeah, this was really interesting to me.
It was explained to me by a logistics expert called Mark Wolfrat.
And he pointed out that when Walmart decided to go into the Perishables business,
which was surprisingly recently, they hired a bunch of grocery store people.
and they figured out how to do it.
And the key constraint is that if you are stocking your own stores with perishable goods,
you need to have them within 250 miles of a distribution center, your own distribution center,
to keep costs down.
And that way you can have the truck load up in the morning at the distribution center,
get out to the store, drop off at the store, come back.
250 miles is the sort of limit for stocking a store efficiently.
Now, Walmart very deliberately planned its rollout of grocery in its stores so that it kind of
happened in these 250-mile radii. It just said, okay, we're going to start here at this store,
this kind of circle of stores, and build a distribution center here.
that can supply this circle, will sort of leap out from there. So at no time was it trying to
stock stores from distribution centers that were further away or subcontracting out that
distribution. So it kept a tight control over that, and that is what enabled it to be so efficient.
Somewhere like Whole Foods, it doesn't have enough stores within a 250-mile radius
to justify the cost of having its own distribution center.
So it has to outsource that.
And when you outsource it, well, you're not getting the efficiencies, first of all.
Second of all, you're paying someone else's overhead.
And second of all, you're also not at the top of the list.
So if there's a delay getting a truck out, that might hit your store.
So Walmart, because it sort of did this very sort of tight logistical planning around the limitations of the cold chain,
it has managed to have those super low prices on perishable produce that, you know,
whole food's been in the business much longer of selling groceries,
but doesn't have the density of stores within that 250 mile radius.
To make it worth building their own facilities in cold chain.
Exactly.
We're now at a place where refrigeration is thankfully for us eaters a mature business,
but it continues to grow.
and the cryosphere comes at a cost because the first law of thermodynamics, you can't,
you can only transfer energy, you can't destroy it.
Why does the cryosphere continue to grow, particularly in the United States, even though it's
such a mature part of our economy?
Yeah, there should be enough refrigerated space in the U.S. for everybody.
We have the most per person of, you know, of anyone in the world, pretty much.
But the issue is, and this is why there is such a lot of investment in refrigerated cold storage right now and such growth in the market, even in the U.S.
The issue is to do with location and type. So location, okay, with the expansion of the Panama Canal, for example, a lot of new refrigerated warehouses are being built along East Coast ports.
that's because now that the Panama Canal is being expanded,
well, food shippers don't want to be dependent on West Coast ports
where you have more union presence and more environmental rules,
and they can be hit with those.
They want the opportunity to ship out of the East Coast, too.
And so there's huge investment in South Carolina,
North Carolina, Jacksonville, Florida.
those ports are all building a lot of refrigerated warehouse space. Also, post-pandemic, there has been a
transition in American shopping habits. So this rise in delivery and on demand and things like
get here and, you know, the companies that are doing this kind of two-hour grocery delivery service,
they have to have distribution centers that can be far out of town. So they're building,
they're coming back into cities or peripheral areas and building new cold storage there to
deal with this new demand. The other thing is, the American labor force is increasingly saying,
you know what, I don't want to work in the cold. And I sympathize with having done that.
And exactly, I am 100% on board with that sentiment. And so there's this rise in automated cold
storages. And those are very different buildings. You can't just retrofit an existing cold storage
to make it automated. The automated ones are several stories high. There are,
are really cool. I went into one and they strapped me to this sort of the automated crane handle and I
went swooping through the racks with this kind of inside the machine. They keep them deliberately
low oxygen for fire prevention because they're too tall for sprinkler systems. So I was a little bit
delirious anyway and the whole thing was like the best theme park ride ever. But yeah, so that's why
the amount of refrigerated space in the U.S. is still expanding because of these shifts in
logistics chains, in how Americans demand their food, and in where Americans are willing to work.
I want to talk about some of the economics and investors in refrigeration. One person who I think
would be particularly interesting to our audience is Tasopolis. I think I got that right.
You did. She made money by looking and
other people's fridges, particularly in India. How did Tassoz invest based on looking inside people's
fridges? Tasos runs an investment, an asset management firm based in London, and his whole investment
strategy is based around looking in people's fridges. And he sort of rejects, you know, the normal
benchmarks. He's like, oh, you know, the S&P 500 is for schmucks. Everyone can look at that.
I go and look in fridges.
And so what he does is the revelation came to him actually in India.
He was trying to figure out here is a country that is, and his specialty, I should say,
is emerging markets.
This is where he goes.
But so he's trying to figure out what these very poor people are going to do as they ascend
to middle class status.
What are they going to buy so that he can invest in those companies and make money?
And the problem is we know that.
as people get richer, they change what they eat. But when you ask them what they're going to eat,
they're like, oh, no, no, no, I would still eat the same things. I wouldn't change anything.
I would send my kid to school and I would, you know, make sure, I don't know, my sister gets the medical
treatment she needs, but they don't say, oh, I'm going to change my whole diet. And they don't know.
And he realized, oh, if you look in the fridges of people who are one socioeconomic class ahead of them, you can see where an entire society will go.
So now he does these huge ethnographic immersions. He's just come back from Indonesia, which is a very kind of exciting market for investors, huge group of very young people, poor.
on the cusp of becoming middle class.
And he just spends hours sitting down having them talk through what's in their fridge.
And he's developed this whole system for analyzing that.
Okay, they're interested.
For example, he told me, you know, in India, you can start seeing, oh, they'll buy some processed
dairy products.
Dairy is huge in India because of the Hindu prohibition on eating.
a lot of meat. So dairy becomes sort of a key protein. And he noticed, ah, in the fridges of people,
one socioeconomic class up, there were yogurts, there were, there were butters, there were cheeses,
there was processed dairy. That gives him an investment tip. He goes into that. It also tells
him when to divest. So in China, which is another country that has refrigerated really recently,
It's further along than India, but only by a little bit.
And he used to invest in Yum China there, which is the parent company of KFC and Taco Bell, all of those.
And he went and looked at Chinese kind of upper middle class fridges and saw that actually those buckets of KFC had been replaced by things like green curry and probiotic yogurt.
And they had moved on to this sort of next stage where it was about,
international foods and also health halo, things that were going to make you better somehow,
you know, more worldly, more cosmopolitan, more healthy. So that international fast food was no longer
a sort of status symbol. And so he divested. So this has proven a very successful
investing strategy for him. And it's super, super fascinating process. I sort of tagged along
remotely on his latest expedition and sort of sat there and watched as he has people sort of
talk their way through their fridge. He does a really interesting exercise where he has them
imagine their fridge in 10 years, which is really just, people can't imagine their fridge in 10
years. They're talking about what they want right now. It tells you about their aspirations for right
now. And he came back from Indonesia with, you know, a squeezable yogurt company that he thinks is a
hot tip. There you go. My fridge in 10 years will be significantly cleaner than it is today.
You also learned about... Don't invest on that basis.
You learned a lot about fridge economics in the United States as well. And one thing that surprised
me, and this is from William Rathjee, is that economic stress changes how we eat in a more
interesting way, which is that people buy more perishable foods and they also throw away more food
when they're under economic stress. What do you think explains that phenomenon? It seems a bit
counterintuitive. Yet it's totally counterintuitive. And Bill Rothschie was a garbologist. He sort of
invented this discipline of sorting through people's trash and figuring out what it said about them.
He was like, well, you know, we do it for ancient civilizations. We learn a ton from, you know,
the midden heaps at archaeological sites. So why not go and sort through the trash of, you know,
middle class homeowners in Phoenix, Arizona and managed to persuade a few graduate students to
get the appropriate shots and come along with him and do it? And he's the one who really quantified
how much food Americans throw away, which is a huge amount. But also, as you say, this really
counterintuitive finding that under economic stress, people will buy more.
and throw away more. And I think it comes from a hoarding mentality. I mean, our fridges,
there's something very primitive about our relationship with them. It is a sort of cave in which we
store and that helps us feel safe and as if we are going to be okay and not hungry and not
desperate. And so there is a hoarding mentality. There's an amazing use.
LA study that took place over a decade here in LA looking at people's homes and focusing on their
fridges and the level of sort of, yeah, just stockpiling that took place almost the more stress and
the more chaos in the household economic stress, but also just sort of time pressure stress
and lifestyle stress, the more they tried to cram into their fridges and freezers.
to make sure they kind of weren't without.
And you can see that come through really clearly in the transcripts.
It's sort of astonishing.
People's fridges are so crammed full that they haven't been able to, you know,
get ice out of their ice tray in, you know, a decade.
But it's a sort of safety mechanism.
And honestly, that's how fridges are marketed a lot of the time
as sort of you have a mini supermarket at home.
You're going to be okay.
You have what you need.
Whatever it is, even if you haven't thought of it.
yet you're going to be fine. And so that reassurance is part of their promise, which is why they end up
leading to so much food waste because, you know, a fridge does keep things fresh, but not forever.
It's not this vault that you can put things in and, you know, save for retirement. You have to eat
it. Eventually, it will go bad. So yet people treat them as this sort of, as a vault where they can
put things in and those things will remain safe. After reading fraud,
It did encourage me to clean out some of the yogurt I had in the back of my fridge.
So you are having impact on readers, Nikki.
I want to wrap up with just a few questions outside of the book.
One really has nothing to do with what we've been talking about, but you study food.
You know the produce supply chain.
One thing I'm constantly amazed by when I go to a grocery store, whether it's Walmart or
Whole Foods or Kroger, is that bananas are just so cheap.
They're like 59 cents a pound.
It makes no sense to me.
Why are bananas so cheap?
Partly why bananas are so cheap is a lost leader.
I mean, bananas represent 10% of everything that goes across the supermarket scanner,
is what I've been told by industry experts.
So they are a key part of a supermarket's business.
They are something that a lot of people buy.
They are America's most popular fruit by a really large margin.
And so keeping those prices down is going to attract customers.
Also, I mean, the banana of commerce is the ultimate refrigerated fruit.
It's something I talk about in the story.
It was really the first fruit to get the full commercial refrigerated treatment.
And you get the United Fruit Company's great white fleet, you know, now Chiquita,
bringing bananas under refrigeration, this tropical fruit that,
you know, now Americans could enjoy for the first time. I will say it's possible it could become
more expensive as those companies are now having to pay for what they did in Central America.
I mean, the term Banana Republic was coined because of the shenanigans, just to put it very mildly,
of these banana companies in league with the CIA in Central America that have left them
destabilized and with really poor governance and infrastructure. And that's increasingly, I mean,
there was a very recent court case in the news where, you know, these companies are now being
held accountable for that action and are having, are being fined. So ultimately, those bananas
may reflect more of their real cost at the store. I don't know. Are there any food trends or trends in
refrigeration that you're particularly excited about, interested in that you want to leave
the listeners of Motley Full Money with. Yeah, I'm really excited about alternatives to refrigeration
and how much better our produce could taste. And this actually ties to another trend that I know
you've talked about on the show, which is the rise of Ozampic and these GLP drugs. One of the
things that's happening for folks who are on these drugs is that they have a much greater appreciation
for produce. They want to eat produce. Suddenly a cucumber or a peach is more appealing than,
you know, a deep fried potato chip or a, you know, I don't know, a general sows chicken.
So that's fascinating for someone who is excited about the future of the coal chain because
one of the areas where refrigeration really doesn't do that well is on deletion.
delivering great produce. We all know how bad a grocery, we all know how bad a grocery store tomato is in the winter.
It tastes of nothing and is as hard as baseball. That's a deliberate choice on the part of tomato growers to
breed for something that can be stored and shipped under refrigeration. Same is true for apples.
They're stored and shipped under refrigeration. And that is what the breeders breed for, not flavor, not deliciousness.
Now, if, and this is a big if, people start demanding more flavor in their produce, well, guess what?
We might need better techniques for preserving our fruit and vegetables.
And one of the stories I look at in the book is a company called Appeal, which is actually saying they've developed a coating made out of food waste,
but in the way it's applied at this nanoscale, it sort of self-assembles into a coating.
that restricts the amount of oxygen and carbon dioxide and moisture going in and out of the fruit
in such a way that it gives you the same shelf life as refrigeration, but at room temperature.
And it preserves the good things, the flavor molecules, the nutrients in your produce better than
refrigeration. Now, if we could have this appeal-coated produce in our stores tasting better
with more of the nutrients we want, and it didn't have to be refrigerated, that could be a huge
win-win.
Nicola Twilly, thanks for joining us on Motley Full Money.
I'm delighted to recommend the book Frostbite to our listeners and your wonderful podcast,
Gastropod.
I've really enjoyed listening to it in preparation for this conversation.
Thanks for being here.
Thank you so much for having me.
As always, people on the program may have interests in the stocks they talk about.
The Motley Fool may have formal recommendations for or against.
So don't buy yourself anything based solely on what you hear.
I'm Ricky Maldi.
Thanks for listening.
We'll be back tomorrow.
