New report reveals $2.4bn in Indian agrifoodtech venture capital funding as investors move upstream to tackle climate change
In collaboration with AgFunder , we proudly present the India Agrifood Startup Investment Report for 2023. The report details $2.4 billion in startup investment, a 33% year-over-year decline from $3.6 billion in 2021. The decline matches the global downward trend but there were bright spots where investors backed innovations focused on farmers and climate change.
Below are some highlights:
Startups innovating upstream, closer to farmers and across the supply chain, bucked the downward trend witnessed globally, raising $617 million, up 50% from $409 million in 2021.
Farmtech investment also remained relatively strong, raising $1.1 billion in 2022, only a modest 15% drop from 2021.
Agribusiness Marketplaces & Fintech was the most popular upstream category among investors.
Investor interest in downstream, food delivery startups waned with consolidation and little new innovation.
Capital availability in India has tightened along with the rest of the world, although not as steeply as in developed markets. Indian venture investors remain bullish on upstream agrifoodtech innovations – those operating on the farm and in the supply chain – that offer deep moats and deliver affordable solutions to smallholder farmers.
In contrast, despite attracting heavy funding over the past few years, investments in downstream startups plunged by 37% in 2022 year-on-year. Once the pandemic lockdowns ended, many downstream ventures struggled to maintain the accelerated pace of growth created by Covid-19 in 2020 and 2021. A highly saturated home delivery market has further reduced investor interest. In the coming months, we expect fewer players to enter the downstream market and more M&A activity among existing companies.
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Other key insights in the report:
The total number of deals declined to 133 in 2022, compared to 230 in 2021.
Meal Marketplaces and eGrocery were the most funded downstream categories yet again. The capital raised by these two categories accounts for 54% of total funding in Indian agrifoodtech, with eGrocery startups landing the highest number of late-stage deals.
Downstream startups raised $1.7 billion in 2022, a 37% decrease from $2.6 billion in 2021. Swiggy's $700 million late-stage deal made up the bulk of investment in this category.
eGrocery startups raised $776 million across 20 deals, accounting for 32% of overall agrifoodtech funding in India.
Midstream Technologies deal activity decreased though the category remains active with $178 million raised across 14 deals.
Michael Dean , founding partner, AgFunder, said: “It is a challenging funding environment for startups globally and, as our report shows, India is no different. The relative increase in upstream financing is a welcome bright spot and reflects the urgency to fund technologies addressing the multiple inefficiencies in our food production and distribution systems that contribute to climate change and hunger.”
Mark Kahn , Managing Partner, Omnivore, said, “Across India’s agrifoodtech ecosystem, 2023 will stress test startups, while also being an ideal vintage for VCs who can enter promising deals at cheap valuations. Despite the transient headwinds, agrifoodtech in India will continue to surge ahead.”
This report includes spotlights on the startups - Agrizy , Ecozen , Varaha , Loopworm and S4S Technologies .
Rob Leclerc, PhD?|?Manuel E. Gonzalez?|?Tom Shields?|?Andrew Finkelstein, MBA?|?Sofia Aguilera?|?John Friedman?|?Angela Tay?|?Ryan Lee | Satya Sagar | Abhilash Sethi | Nagarajan Sivaramakrishnan | Harsh Kumar Bhanwala | Jinesh Shah | Reihem Roy | Subhadeep Sanyal | Shilpa Divekar Nirula | Lovish Soni | Imran Khan | Sandeep Mukherjee |
Agriculture Sustainability Manager
1 年Ollie Potter
Founder at FAWDA | Digitizing Agri-Support | Labour and Machinery
1 年We feel agri-tech and food-tech segments should be used separately. I understand the difficulty, but somehow we should distinguish. Agri-tech works with agriculture and rural consumers. Whereas, food-tech always has high paying customers one one end, which is missing with "real" agri-tech. Enlightening report btw. Thanks Omnivore.
CoFounder Director at Krishi Kalpa Foundation (KKF)
1 年Great shift, pleasant transformation indeed as tech interventions are desperately in need at the Upstream, strengthening the backward integration. This will rather ensure tranperancy in revenue sharing across the value chain & soon, disintermediation will emerge as the operational dynamics & establish sustainability
Viridian Seeds
1 年Intresting, Jeet Dasgupta Charles Spillane Abhimanyu Sarkar
?? Business Innovation Coach | Food & Agro MSMEs Mentor Helping Create Profitable, Scalable Business Models | IIT Kharagpur Mentor I Leadership I Start-ups | Independent Director | AI Driven Tech
1 年Great News for Founders in AgriTech. Thanks Mark Kahn for this report and always supporting the AgriBusiness in India ???? ??.