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Funding for Asia-Pacific agtech is increasing as downstream foodtech startups feel the venture capital fallout

  • Investment in Asia-Pacific agrifoodtech startups reached $6.5 billion in 2022, a 58% year-over-year decline on 2021’s record-breaking year. 
  • But investment in upstream innovations – those for the farm and primary production of novel foods – increased 24% year-over-year.
  • While funding levels in 2023 are down on 2022, the ecosystem is still very active with a similar number of deals closing during the first half of this year compared to H1 2022.

As the world’s largest region in both geography and population, with a vast network of smallholder farmers combined with dense urban settings and food sovereignty concerns, Asia-Pacific is a hotbed of opportunity for food and agriculture technology startups.

But in 2023, downstream food delivery and restaurant startups, once the darling of the region’s agrifoodtech ecosystem, fueling tens of billions of dollars of investment, are no longer so attractive to investors. 

The new star of the ecosystem is upstream innovation, reveals a new report from leading agrifoodtech venture firm and research platform AgFunder, in collaboration with the Bill & Melinda Gates FoundationOmnivore and AgriFutures Australia.

While total funding to the farm-to-fork agrifoodtech ecosystem dropped 58% year-over-year (YoY) to $6.5 billion in 2022 from the record-breaking $15.2 billion raised in 2021, investment in startups operating upstream increased 24% YoY. This increase appears to be continuing in 2023, according to preliminary data on 2023 funding flows.

This is good news for the 450 million smallholder farmers producing about 80% of the region’s food. For the first time in years, upstream funding, which provides technologies to farmers and primary food producers, overtook downstream investment. The former raised $3.2 billion in 2022 versus the latter’s $2.7 million, according to the report. 

The Ag Biotechnology category was particularly buoyant in the Asia-Pacific region in 2022, bringing in $813 million in funding, nearly half the amount raised globally in this category in 2022. While a couple of very large deals contributed to these totals, there was also greater deal activity in this segment, which includes on-farm inputs for crop & animal agriculture,” confirming investors’ growing interest in this space.

Innovative Food – the category housing the alternative protein industry – bucked the global decline in funding to the segment, with investment actually increasing year-over-year to $527 million, albeit over fewer deals.

Similarly, Farm Management Software, Sensing & IoT ($334m), Farm Robotics ($252m) and Novel Farming Systems startups ($254m), which include indoor farming and aquaculture and insect farming, brought in more funding across fewer deals.

China, meanwhile, lost its lead to India as the country attracting the most funding in 2022, likely due to the loss of downstream mega-deals that propped up China’s agrifoodtech investment in 2021. India’s lead looks to be short lived, however; in H1 2023, China grabbed the top spot back, raising $861 million. 

The report includes deep dive sections on investment to startups in Australia, China, India, Indonesia and Southeast Asia. And spotlights on startups ZetifiIntegricultureEratani and Tablepointer.

Some key insights include:

  • Asia-Pacific agrifoodtech startups raised $6.4 billion in 2022, down 56% from the record-breaking $15.2 billion raised in 2021. But upstream investment increased 24% year-over-year to $3.2 billion.
  • In the first half of 2023, some $2.6 billion has closed, a nearly 50% decline compared to H1 2022. But again upstream startups gathered more funding than in the same period in 2022, reaching $1.7 billion, a 1.6% year-over-year increase.
  • In H1 2023, Chinese startups have raised the most funding, with $861 million. India ($712 million) is next, followed by Hong Kong ($400 million) and Australia ($146 million).
  • Ag Biotechnology was the biggest upstream category in 2022, raising $813 million. China’s Zhongxin Breeding, a startup in this category, secured the year’s largest deal with its $327 million seed round.
  • Downstream’s biggest category was once again eGrocery, which raised $1.6 billion in funding. India eGrocery startup Blinkit’s $150 million raise was the largest downstream deal.
  • Startups in Midstream Technologies raised $620 million in 2022, with big checks going to India’s Waycool and China’s Mojia Biotech.
  • Despite fewer deals, dollar investment in 2022 increased year-over-year in Innovative Foods; Ag Biotech; Farm Management, Software Sensing & IoT; Novel Farming Systems; and Farm Robotics.
  • India ($2.3 billion) overtook China ($1.3 billion) in 2022 as the region’s top country for agrifoodtech investment, followed by Indonesia ($716 million) and South Korea ($461 million).
  • Southeast Asia startups funding reached $1.7 billion in 2022.
  • Australian agrifoodtech startups closed 38 deals in 2022, totaling $316 million and investment momentum appears to have been maintained in H1 2023, with $146 million closed.
  • Japan ranked at #8 in 2022, bringing in $211 million across 43 deals.
  • Debt, early and growth-stage deals numbers have increased steadily since 2018; late-stage funding declined from 2021.

This report was produced by AgFunder in collaboration with the Bill & Melinda Gates FoundationOmnivore and AgriFutures Australia.

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