In the past 48 hours, the pet care industry shows robust growth in tech-driven segments amid regulatory pressures. Pet wearables are surging due to pet humanization and preventive health demands, evolving from trackers to AI-integrated health systems with real-time monitoring and veterinary data links[1]. North America leads, while Asia-Pacific grows fastest from urban pet ownership.
Plant-based pet food is gaining traction, projected at 1.5 billion USD in 2026, up to 2.3 billion by 2033, fueled by ethical, allergen-free preferences and sustainability[3]. Leaders like Mars and General Mills innovate with pea proteins and customized nutrition via AI analytics.
Consumer behavior shifts toward premium wellness: 75 percent of US millennials treat pets as family, boosting pet perfumes to 2.7 billion USD by 2034 and infrared therapy beds from brands like HigherDOSE[7]. Usage-based pet insurance explodes, with firms like Satellai and Figo offering discounts for wearable-tracked activity[9].
Regulatory headwinds emerge in Canada, where CFIA cuts over 1,370 jobs, risking inspection delays, animal disease surveillance, and supply chain bottlenecks for pet food exporters[2]. No major deals or disruptions reported, but FDA eyes supply chain resiliency[4].
Compared to prior weeks, tech integration accelerates versus stable food segments. Leaders respond with ecosystem partnerships: wearables link to insurance and vets, while plant-food makers emphasize traceability. Overall, innovation counters challenges, prioritizing data-driven care over traditional models. (248 words)
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