AgriTech – A Hotspot for Investments

AgriTech – the sought after technology breakthrough:
In recent times, AgriTech or AgTech solutions are gaining their popularity factor because
individuals and entities alike, are becoming increasingly aware of the efficiency
technology adds to their daily processes, which otherwise would have been tasking to
follow through with. The ‘revolutionary’ factor has been highlighted in the AgTech space
and hence, it has caught the eyes of investors and big corporations.
AgTech represents that specific niche category of technology buffs that intermingle the
age-old occupation of agriculture with the new age specs and wonders of technology.
The specifics of Agronomic Processes:
The agronomic processes encompass diverse solutions in every step, ranging from the
sowing of seeds to the harvesting of crops. The processes comprise of integrated
resolutions to enhance efficiency within agricultural organizations, along with benefiting
smallholder and marginal farmers.
AgriTech, breaking barriers and records:
The upward curve of investments and profitability within the industry does not seem like
it would dip anytime soon, with a continuous maturity, breaking barriers, and records.
Since 2013, funding within the AgTech sector has increased by roughly a whopping
370%. According to an AgFunder report, specifically, startup investments bucked global
venture capital markets across all sectors to $4.7 billion in 2019. The 695 deals were
carried out across 940 unique investors.
COVID-19 comes into play:
Similar growth cannot be expected for the remainder of 2020, due to Coronavirus
governing industries across all business streams. However, there is less chance of the
investments cutting to a freefall wherein they would dip way lower than initially
expected. New investment projects may be put on hold, however, ongoing funding is
expected to be perennial.
Localizing our viewpoint, we notice that most of these investments are still being carried
out within the United States. However, investments in India continue to rise at a rapid
rate, representative of a two-way flow (up-stream as well as down-stream) of funding,
again highlighting the maturity of the sector.
The reasoning:
WHY? Every action has an equal and opposite reaction. Sir Isaac Newton was well aware
of the specifics of investment and the network within which it functions. Our world is at

a point today, where overpopulation is a severe problem in various countries, along with
the overall population set to increase by 30% over the next 35 years, according to
Global-Engage.com. According to a report conducted by FAO, agricultural production
will have to increase by 60-70% to feed the world population by 2050. To work towards
an increase in the production of food, along with keeping a tap on the factor of
‘sustainability’, it is essential and integral to adopt smart farming and smart agricultural
practices, allowing processes and outcomes to become more efficient in the long run.
The Need for Emerging Trends:
The importance of utilizing ‘big data’ and ‘predictive analytics’ to counteract the issues
faced by farmers daily is now more than ever. They will allow farmers to achieve and
maybe even surpass their targets for the seasons, resulting in an influx of productivity. In
a survey conducted with farmers, 60% mentioned that precision farming is an influential
trend to look towards for a structural and foundational change in the way daily practices
take place. With the risk of climate change looming overhead at all times, it is crucial to
understand the essential need to channel funds towards projects that solve difficult and
foreseen problems.
The Agricultural 4.0 wave:
Today, 25-30% of all food produced is wasted, which incurs a social, economic, and
environmental cost of $2.5 trillion annually. An outdated supply chain with no digital
integrations or climate-smart advisory results in around 20% of the crops produced in
developed countries being left in the field itself. To spark a change and make a
difference, socially conscious investors who look to profitability as well, view the AgTech
sector as a gold mine, essentially killing two birds with one stone.
AgriTech today is an area that is ripe for innovation with limits imposed solely due to
constraints in terms of available capital. When this constraint is counteracted, creativity
applied to AI and food production will be ten-fold.
– Sanjay Borkar
Founder, CEO of FarmERP