Cassava Across Sectors: Food, Feed & Industrial Uses Shaping Market Potential

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Cassava’s versatility means it serves food, feed, and industrial sectors. Learn which application segments are growing fastest—and where future opportunity lies.

One of cassava’s strengths is its cross-sector applicability. From bakery to animal feed to adhesives, it spans a wide spectrum. The MRFR report segments the market by application (food & beverage, animal feed, others) and by form (liquid, solid), helping us understand where growth is concentrated. 


Application Segments & Current Dynamics

  1. Food & Beverages
    This category contributes roughly 70.4% of total market revenue, making it the dominant use. Cassava derivatives (flour, starch, tapioca, etc.) are utilized in bakery, snacks, extruded foods, sauces, desserts, and gluten-free formulations.

  2. Animal Feed
    Though currently smaller, this is the fastest-growing application segment. Rising demand in livestock and poultry sectors is pushing feed formulators to seek cost-effective carbohydrate sources. 

  3. Others (Industrial / Specialty)
    The “others” bucket covers adhesives, bio-plastics, textiles, paper, pharmaceuticals, etc. While its share is smaller currently, it holds promise as biobased and sustainable solutions gain more interest.


Form Factor: Liquid vs Solid

  • Liquid forms (syrups, aqueous starch, pastes) currently lead in revenue share, particularly in food formulations and some industrial uses. 

  • Solid forms (powders, flours) are the fastest-growing, as demand scales for bakery, snacks, and functional food segments. 


Growth Drivers by Application

Food & Beverages

  • Demand for gluten-free, allergen-free, health-enhancing foods

  • Consumer preference for natural ingredients

  • Reformulation of traditional products with cassava derivatives

Animal Feed

  • Rising meat consumption globally

  • Need for alternative energy sources as prices of traditional grains fluctuate

  • Regional adoption of cassava in feed to reduce import dependence

Industrial / Others

  • Shift toward bio-based materials in plastics, adhesives, packaging

  • Need for natural binders, thickeners, and specialty chemicals

  • Sustainability mandates pushing alternatives to petrochemical derivatives


Challenges in Application Expansion

  • In feed and industrial sectors, margins are often tight; cassava derivatives must compete with well-entrenched alternatives (corn, soy, synthetic polymers).

  • Strict quality and purity requirements in food or pharma sectors demand consistent processing standards.

  • Regulatory approvals, certifications, and compliance may be required in industrial or specialty domains.


Strategic Moves & Portfolio Diversification

  • Co-development with end users
    Engage food, feed, and industrial customers to co-design cassava derivatives meeting their functional specifications.

  • Balanced product portfolio
    Don’t rely solely on food segment; maintain exposure to feed and industrial sectors to buffer cycles.

  • Invest in modification & fractionation
    Offer tailored starch types (modified, resistant, hydrolyzed) for higher performance in specialty applications.

  • Promote sustainability & branding
    Use eco-credentials or biobased claims in industrial segments to capture pricing premium.

  • Regional alignment
    Tailor application focus by region (e.g. more feed in livestock-intensive regions, more industrial in developed economies)


What the Future Looks Like

Given the projected robust growth of the cassava market (from USD 198.90 B to USD 312.15 B by 2035), application diversification becomes critical. While food & beverages will remain the backbone, animal feed is the rising star in terms of growth rate, and industrial/specialty segments offer optionality and margin leverage.

The successful players will be those who can move beyond bulk raw material supply and become solution providers — adapting cassava derivatives to meet the functional, regulatory, and branding needs of diverse sectors.

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