Inspired by the Fortune 500, Forward Fooding has created the FoodTech 500.
Described as the ‘world’s first’ definitive list of “global entrepreneurial talent at the intersection between food, technology and sustainability”, the lineup was produced from more than 1,200 applications from 54 countries.
Of the top ranking 500 companies, 78.2% are less than five years old, and 56.1% are at pre-seed or seed-stage funding. Yet despite their early stage, Forward Fooding noted that close to 75% are revenue-generating.
“The companies that have made the FoodTech 500 are all entrepreneurial success stories in their own right, which is why we are so proud to bring them to your attention,” said Forward Fooding CEO Alessio D’Antino.
Creating the FoodTech 500
Forward Fooding is a collaborative platform that aims to link start-ups with established industry players from the food and beverage industry.
In summer of 2019, Forward Fooding launched the FoodTech Data Navigator – a global agri-food tech platform designed to help businesses keep up with trends innovations, and funding movements from start-ups, accelerators and investors.
It is this platform that calculated each applicant’s business size score and digital footprint score. A sustainability score was derived from environmental data collected from the finalists.
To be considered for the FoodTech 500 shortlist, businesses had to have been formed less than 15 years ago, and be aligned with Forward Fooding’s definition of AgriFoodTech.
Forward Fooding defines AgriFoodTech as the emergent sector exploring how technology can be leveraged to improve efficiency and sustainability in designing, producing, choosing, delivering and enjoying food.
To determine the applicants’ sustainability scores, Forward Fooding looked at a range of factors, including whether: the company’s manufacturing process had a low carbon footprint; its product has third party sustainable certification; employs a dedicated sustainability team, and its revenue and funding is significant enough to have a ‘real impact’ on its current ecosystem.
Forward Fooding also analysed the company’s dedication to the UN Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs).
The FoodTech 500: Top 10
The complete list reveals a number of trends in the AgriFoodTech sector, from insect snacks to vertical farming and sustainable packaging solutions.
Vertical farming
The top position in the FoodTech 500 was claimed by US vertical farming operation AeroFarms.
Vertical farming is tipped to play an increasingly important role in global agriculture, as we turn to technology to feed the 9.8 billion people expected to be on the planet by 2050.
The company builds, owns, and operates indoor vertical farms – vertically-stacked, fully controlled environments used to produce food – which it says sets a ‘new standard’ for protected agriculture from seed to package.
“AeroFarms is fundamentally both an agriculture and technology company,” noted founders David Rosenberg, Marc Oshima, and Ed Hardwood in an interview with Forward Fooding.
“We are not just a farm – we are a group of full-stack, world-class agriculture experts changing the way plants are understood and food is grown, with technology at the core.
“Our horticulture intersects with engineering, food safety, data science, and nutrition, giving us the unique capability to understand plant biology in a new way that has never been understood.”
The business is using machine learning and IoT integration to ‘bring agriculture into the future’. “From last year to this year, we have grown over 500 million plants alone and over 800 different varieties, celebrating a rich biodiversity. More importantly, we are able to harvest not just the plants, but also the insights to ensure high quality through-put all year round.”
Other vertical farming players to rank in the top 10 include Germany-based Agrilution, developed the fully automated vertical farming system ‘Plantcube’, London-based vertical farming business Growing Underground.
Packaging solutions
Plastic pollution and single-use plastics are devastating the environment. Yet TIPA Corp, which ranked in second place, recognises it also has a use in the food industry: plastic protects food and extends shelf life.
To reduce the amount of single-use plastic used in the food industry, the Israeli agri-food start-up developed bio-based packaging it claims has the same functional properties as conventional flexible plastic yet is fully compostable.
TIPA has since inked deals with companies including UK supermarket retailer Waitrose & Partners and Irish vegan brand The Happy Pear.
Founders Daphna Nissenbaum and Tal Neuman told Forward Fooding that consumers are voting with their choices against unsustainable brands. “The role of technology is crucial in leading advanced creative solutions to the growing need for an environmentally and healthy food industry.”
Ranking sixth on the FoodTech 500 is sustainable seaweed packaging company Notpla – a start-up perhaps best known for their Ooho capsules. The edible beverage capsules, produced in collaboration with Lucozade Ribena Suntory, are made entirely from seaweed extract and were trialled at last year’s London marathon.
The company said its goal as the outset was to “find a way to replace plastic packaging with a material that is abundant in nature”.
Insects
Humans have been consuming insects for centuries. Yet in recent years, as businesses look to alternative protein sources produced using less
water, land, and feed than livestock farming, a number of insect companies have started trading in Europe.
French insect brand Jimini’s, for example, took out fifth place in the FoodTech 500. The start-up breeds its insects in ‘specialised’ European modern farms and transforms them into ‘delicious products’. “As this is a brand new ingredient, we implement techniques and innovative production methods,” noted co-founders Clément Scellier and Bastien Rabastiens.
“The new possibilities tech offers represent an opportunity we have to embrace. Whether it’s new ingredients, new techniques, [or] new ways of consuming.”
Crické is another insect brand to feature in the top 500. Ranked in 49th place, the company uses cricket powder in their ‘cricket crackers’ snacks. Eat Grub, which sells products including edible crickets, grasshoppers, mealworms, and buffalo worms, came in 68th position.