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Gladstone Land Makes First Acquisition of 2019

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Agricultural real estate investment trust (REIT) Gladstone Land has made its first acquisition of 2019, announcing the purchase of a 695-acre farm in Lincoln County, Nebraska, for $2.4 million.

With 600 acres of irrigated, tillable land and three on-site wells with updated pivots and electrical panels, the farm rotates between producing popcorn, edible beans, and potatoes.

As is standard procedure for Gladstone, upon the acquisition, the company is engaging the seller, Malmkar Farms of Grant, Nebraska, in a long-term lease agreement on the property.

“This is the first of what we hope will be many new acquisitions during 2019,” said David Gladstone, president and CEO of Gladstone Land.  “This farm has good water, grows some specialty crops that aren’t as volatile in pricing as certain other types of crops in the region, such as corn, and add another established and long-term operator to our list of farm tenants.”

These combined factors are indicative to Gladstone that the deal relatively low risk investment, and will be accretive to the company and its shareholders.

“This farm is located in an area of Nebraska known for good water and specialty crop production,” said Bill Hughes, managing director of Gladstone Land. “We look forward to opening up this new region and adding edible beans and popcorn to our already diverse crop portfolio. We anticipate our relationship with such a respected and established operator as Malmkar Farms will provide us with opportunities to add even more acres of specialty crops to our holdings.”

One Potato, Two Potato

This deal is the first since November 2018 for the company, and its second potato-growing operation, since it acquired a 3,667-acre potato farm in Hartley County, Texas, for $8.5 million.

The farm, which primarily grows chip potatoes, includes 2,200 acres of irrigated land, and brings with it very reliable water, with 12 wells and 19 pivots on site.

Gladstone was making deals at a breakneck pace in the final quarter of last year. This was the second deal announced by the company within the month, following the acquisition of a 951-acre farm in Madera County, California, that includes 715 acres of mature fig orchards, and 224 acres of mature pistachio orchards for $23 million.

Prior to this, in September of last year, Gladstone announced three deals. First, the acquisition of a 547-acre farm in northern Florida growing peanuts and melons for $2.6 million, followed days later by the additional acquisition of two more permanent crop farms totaling 194 acres of cherry orchards in Kings County, California, for approximately $6.9 million.

Gladstone’s latest acquisition brings its portfolio to 86 farms totaling 73,900 acres across 10 U.S. states, and valued at $621 million. Its holdings are concentrated in fresh produce annual row crops, and permanent crops including almonds, pistachios, and blueberries.

-Lynda Kiernan  

Lynda Kiernan is Editor with GAI Media and daily contributor to GAI News. If you would like to submit a contribution for consideration, please contact Ms. Kiernan at lkiernan@globalaginvesting.com.

The post Gladstone Land Makes First Acquisition of 2019 appeared first on Global AgInvesting.


At Final Close, ADM Capital Has Raised More Than $450M for Cibus Fund

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London-based private equity and advisory firm ADM Capital has had a final close at $332 million for its global agribusiness investment fund ADM Cibus Fund. The firm has also raised an additional $130 million that will be earmarked for co-investments, resulting in the cumulative raising for the fund topping out at $452 million.

ADM Capital announced a first close on the fund at $100 million in mid-2017, on its way to a projected $500 million target.

This was followed a year later by ADM announcing that it was exiting its Central Eastern European and Kazakhstan private equity business through a management buyout; the move being undertaken to position the firm to be better able to focus on its Asian fixed income business, its global Cibus Fund, and its ADM Capital Foundation.

Led by ADM Capital co-founder, Robert Appleby, and Jason Silm, former head of Agribusiness Investment at VTB capital and director at Macquarie Agricultural Funds Management, the fund aims to capitalize upon the significant investment opportunities generated by the ongoing evolution occurring in global demographics and trade patterns, and the inability to meet growing regional demand for high-value foods by some of the world’s fastest growing economies.

Aligning with the fund’s philosophy of partnering with category leaders that have solid leadership teams in place and evident technological advantage resulting in superior returns, the team will seek out investments across North America, Europe, and Australasia in sustainable food companies as well as in seed, fertilizer, and ag machinery and chemical producers, land-light producers of high-value nuts, fruits, vegetables, meat; aquaculture; processors and value-adders; and distributors and logistics providers.

Under the structure of the fund’s investment thesis upon its launch, 90 percent of The Cibus Fund is earmarked to invest in mid-market companies posting an EBITDA in excess of $3 million; while intentions are to invest between $10 million and $75 million (average $45 million) across 10 or 11 deals. For this majority portion of the fund, ADM Capital will be targeting an internal rate of return of between 20 and 25 percent and a return on invested capital of 3x, according to the company.

The remaining 10 percent of the fund will be allocated toward a secondary mandate set to invest in ‘high-growth’ companies in the agtech sector in the same geographies of Europe and Australasia, which notes that the high growth portion of the fund will not be making venture investments, but will be aiming to make average investments of $7 million in Series C and D rounds across seven commercial enterprises with proven positive revenue flows.

To date, the Cibus Fund has made six investments to build out a portfolio that includes AeroFarms, a developer of high-tech, indoor aeroponic vertical farms; Rootility, an Israeli-based developer of innovative root-focused plant breeding methods designed to increase crop yields and overall agronomic performance; Innoliva, one of the largest European producers of extra virgin olive oil; and a 1,000-plus acre fully mature almond orchard in the district of Sunraysia in the state of Victoria, Australia.

“We have been encouraged by the reception Cibus has received,” said Robert Appleby, co-founder and CIO of ADM Capital. “Investors have embraced the opportunities provided by people’s changing diets, particularly backing companies addressing the global challenges of future food production with less land, less water and a lighter ecological footprint. The six companies we have invested in have benefited from our technical competence and global connections.”

-Lynda Kiernan  

Lynda Kiernan is Editor with GAI Media and daily contributor to GAI News. If you would like to submit a contribution for consideration, please contact Ms. Kiernan at lkiernan@globalaginvesting.com.

The post At Final Close, ADM Capital Has Raised More Than $450M for Cibus Fund appeared first on Global AgInvesting.

OurCrowd Partnering with 7thirty for $30M Cannabis Tech Fund

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Israel-based global investment platform OurCrowd announced it is partnering with U.S.-based 7thirty Opportunity Fund for the formation of a $30 million cannabis tech investment fund.

Led by Jon Medved, OurCrowd is a venture capital platform and leader in equity crowdfunding. Managed by a team of investment professionals, OurCrowd conducts its own due diligence on prospective investments before committing its own capital. It then invites from its 30,000 accredited members from more than 150 countries, and institutional partners to join in these select investment opportunities. To date, OurCrowd has raised more than $900 million and has invested in 170 portfolio companies and funds.

Driving the formation are a number of global factors including the recent legalization of marijuana by the Canadian government; the legalization of medical marijuana by the UK in 2018; Israel closing in on legalizing cannabis exports; and the fact that 95 percent of U.S. citizens live in states where cannabis has some level of legalization, either for medical or recreational uses.

This growing trend toward legalization and legitimacy is creating channels of investment opportunity not only in cannabis production but the tech supporting that production. For example, to get an idea of the scope, the single city of Denver has 4.2 million square feet of space allocated to the indoor growing of marijuana – and in New Mexico, a company called Bright Green Group is behind a $160 million, six million square foot state-of-the-art research and growing facility that eclipses other medical marijuana greenhouse operations in California, Massachusetts, and Illinois. Indeed, every square-foot will be in need of supporting technology – and that is not including the technological requirements needed by distributors, retailers, and consumers.

“As this industry grows, job opportunities grow, tax revenue grows and ancillary businesses grow around them,” Kris Krane, president of Boston-based 4Front Ventures told the Cannabist.  “It’s been a real financial boon for the states where it’s been implemented.”

This new fund, which will be headquartered in Boulder, Colorado, will focus on investment opportunities in emerging cannabis tech companies related to agtech, medtech, retail, e-commerce, SaaS solutions, deep-tech research, and marketplaces across the Israeli, Canadian, and U.S. markets.

The explosive growth of the legal and medical cannabis market is quite impressive,” said Jon Medved, CEO, OurCrowd. “Canada recently legalized cannabis nationwide and Israel is in the final stages of legalizing cannabis export. The amount of serious medical research in cannabis is booming. This market will generate unprecedented global investment activity and returns for cannabis focused startups. Together with 7thirty, we plan to lead investments for serious companies who will pioneer technology for this important and growing market.”

The 7thirty Opportunity Fund is an early stage growth equity fund targeting private cannabis-related tech investments on a global scale. The fund is led  by veteran cannabis tech investor, Micah Tapman, who has led investments in more than 90 cannabis related companies including Wurk, BDS Analytics, and Front Range Biosciences, which in October 2018 raised the largest cannabis biotech round to-date.

“The ability to work side by side with Micah and the 7thirty team is really exciting for us,” said Kfir Kachlon, principal and cannabis tech lead with OurCrowd. “OurCrowd has already invested in leading Israeli cannabis technology companies such as Syqe and Edenshield, and now together with 7thirty we look forward to combining our Israeli deal flow with their North American leadership in the industry to create a truly winning fund formula.”

Lynda Kiernan

Lynda Kiernan is Editor with GAI Media and daily contributor to GAI News. If you would like to submit a contribution for consideration, please contact Ms. Kiernan at lkiernan@globalaginvesting.com.

The post OurCrowd Partnering with 7thirty for $30M Cannabis Tech Fund appeared first on Global AgInvesting.

Canada’s Canopy Growth Invests $150M in U.S. Expansion

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Canadian marijuana company Canopy Growth announced its plans to invest up to $150 million to establish its first production facility in the U.S.

Following the passage of the 2018 Farm Bill allowing for the commercial production of hemp, the company has been granted a license by New York State to produce and process the crop, opening the door for the company to begin plans on a Hemp Industrial Park to be located in Binghamton, in the Southern Tier region of New York.

Founded in 2013 and traded in Toronto under the ticker WEED, Canopy is the largest publicly traded cannabis company in the world. Since the beginning, the company has built a strong IP portfolio, launched targeted R&D programs for both human and animal health, driven innovation in the legal marijuana space, and has accelerated its market leadership position.  This drive has seen the company and its subsidiaries Tweed and Spectrum Cannabis, establish a respected presence in 11 global markets.

 

“In New York we see an opportunity to create products that improve people’s lives,” said Bruce Linton, co-CEO and chairman of Canopy Growth. “In the process, we will create jobs in an exciting, highly profitable new industry.”

 

From Constellation

 

Canopy Growth refers this move into the U.S. as a direct strategic result of the game-changing $4 billion invested in the company in mid-August 2018 by global alcohol giant Constellation Brands.

“Our business can now make the strategic investments required to accelerate our market position globally,” said Bruce Linton, chairman and Co-CEO, Canopy Growth.  “Constellation’s concentration of global cannabis activities exclusively through Canopy, coupled with the investment and its expert capabilities in brand-building, marketing, consumer insights and M&A will be a huge benefit as we look to expand our portfolio in Canada, the United States and emerging cannabis markets around the globe.”

 

Constellation made its first foray into the legal marijuana sector in October 2017, when the group acquired a 10 percent stake in Canopy Growth for $191 million with the goal of developing non-alcoholic, cannabis-infused beverages as part of the company’s “long term strategy to identify, meet and stay ahead of evolving consumer trends and market dynamics…” This subjectively huge deal (at the time) marked the first time an alcohol company had decided to enter the legal marijuana space.

 

“Over the past year, we’ve come to better understand the cannabis market, the tremendous growth opportunity it presents, and Canopy’s market-leading capabilities in this space,” Constellation Brands CEO Rob Sands said in a statement at the time.

 

To New York

 

The final amount being invested by Canopy in New York will depend on Board approval of a specific site, and will range anywhere between $100 million and $150 million. The Hemp Industrial Park project, however, will include large-scale production capabilities focused on product manufacturing, and resulting in tons of hemp extract per year.

 

“I fought so hard to strip the burdensome federal regulations from industrial hemp in our Industrial Hemp Farming Act of 2018, which was recently included in the Farm Bill, because I knew how much it could mean to the Southern Tier, and this investment proves it,” said Senator Charles E. Schumer. “I’m so pleased that Canopy Growth is joining my efforts to make the Southern Tier the Silicon Valley of industrial hemp production and research and will keep pushing to see industrial hemp become a true cash crop in the region.”

 

Canopy is currently in the process of vetting possible building sites, and a choice is expected to be announced within 100 days. Once the site is established, Canopy will source its hemp from U.S. farmers and will act as the anchor business at the location. However, third party businesses can join the innovative vertically integrated hemp ecosystem from cropping, to seed, to fiber, to cannabinoids.

 

~ Lynda Kiernan

 
 
Lynda Kiernan is Editor with GAI Media and daily contributor to GAI News. If you would like to submit a contribution for consideration, please contact Ms. Kiernan at lkiernan@globalaginvesting.com.

The post Canada’s Canopy Growth Invests $150M in U.S. Expansion appeared first on Global AgInvesting.

Crop Enhancement Scores Funding from Wilbur-Ellis VC Arm Cavallo Ventures

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Cavallo Ventures, the venture capital arm of Wilbur-Ellis, a global leader in crop-protection, precision agtech, marketing, distribution, seed, and nutritional products has made a seven-figure investment in Crop Enhancement Inc.

 

Founded in 2011 in California by scientist, entrepreneur, and former professor of chemical engineering at UC Berkeley, David Soane, Crop Enhancement is a developer of sustainable agrochemical formulations targeting high value fruit and vegetable crops which are able to improve crop yields, reduce the need for synthetic pesticides, and enable precise and effective delivery of fertilizers.

 

CropCoat, the company’s initial product, is a proprietary protective coating that protects fruit and vegetable crops by modifying plant surfaces (leaves, stems, fruits, and seeds) to be stronger and more resistant to pests and diseases. This technology, that is focusing on major fruit and vegetable crops across North America, Southeast Asia, China, Latin America, and West Africa, not only helps the environment through the reduction in the use of synthetic chemicals, but also improves the well-being and health of farmers and their workers.

 

“Growers around the world tell us that they want solutions that are good for their farms as well as the environment,” said Kevin Chen, Ph.D., CEO of Crop Enhancement. “In trials we’ve completed, our first product, CropCoat, is proving to be an effective and sustainable crop protection technology. As we expand our efforts to fruits and vegetables here in the U.S., we’re delighted to welcome Cavallo Ventures into the fold.”

 

Film Stars

 

Such emerging ag technologies that uses film or coating methods to protect crops and foods, and reduce pesticide and preservative use, are quickly commercializing and gaining funding.

In July of last year, Apeel Sciences announced $70 million in new funding led by Viking Global Investors and including Andreessen Horowitz, Upfront Ventures, and S2G Ventures, among other unnamed participants.

Across the U.S. market alone, the retail sector generates 8 million tons of waste per year through distribution centers and stores, representing a loss of $18 billion. In addition, U.S. households throw away more than 400 pounds of food per person per year, losing an average household of four $1,800 annually, according to Apeel.

To combat these numbers, the company has developed a method for extracting molecules from organic agricultural waste and byproducts – such as grape skins that remain after wine production processing or banana peels, leaves, or stems left over after harvesting – to create undetectable edible barriers derived from natural plant extracts. These barriers significantly  slow the process of decay of fresh produce, making each piece of fruit its own microclimate and extending shelf life without refrigeration, a controlled atmosphere, or preservatives.

Two months later, in September 2018, Australian agtech biofilm company OneCrop secured a multimillion dollar investment from the Kahlbetzer family’s Twynam Group.

OneCrop makes cost-effective degradable films made from hyper low-density polymers, non-GMO starch, and non-degradable compounds that  store soil moisture and increase soil temperature resulting in higher yields, saving water, and increased sustainability. Once used, the films break down in approximately four months.

 

Enhancement

 

This investment by Wilbur-Ellis through Cavallo Ventures, is indicative of the company’s goal of striving to meet and address widespread trends that are disrupting how food is produced. It is also indicative of the company’s commitment to the needs of the thousands of farmers it serves, who are themselves responding to demands from both food companies and consumers to greater sustainability and less chemical use in food production.

“We’re glad to be able to back the Crop Enhancement team as they develop innovative solutions to long-standing challenges in production agriculture,” said Mike Wilbur, president and CEO of Cavallo Ventures. “Their unique approach addresses trends in the food and ag industry calling for products that are more sustainable and friendlier for growers, their farms and the global ecosystem.”

-Lynda Kiernan

 
 
Lynda Kiernan is Editor with GAI Media and daily contributor to GAI News. If you would like to submit a contribution for consideration, please contact Ms. Kiernan at lkiernan@globalaginvesting.com.

The post Crop Enhancement Scores Funding from Wilbur-Ellis VC Arm Cavallo Ventures appeared first on Global AgInvesting.

GAI News Agtech Intel Question of the Month Wrap-Up – January 2019

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GAI News Agtech Intel Question of the Month Wrap-Up – January 2019

Recently, INNO-3B, a tech company that develops efficient, high-tech growing systems for vertical farming operations, raised US$4.5 million in Seed funding. In your opinion, do you see vertical farming and the tech that supports it dividing into two separate investment channels?

I suppose that the responses from this question fall into what I would expect when asking about a development that is just beginning to show hints of emergence.  

A solid 50 percent of our respondents stated that vertical farming and the tech that supports it will definitely divide into two separate investment channels. As the vertical farming industry matures, specialization will only become more pronounced, leading to farmers growing, and tech companies taking over the development of the systems supporting that endeavor.

Meanwhile, the second 50 percent of respondents were split almost evenly:

Twenty percent stated that vertical farming and the tech that supports it may split into two distinct investment channels. As production scales up, there is a good chance that growers will be more willing to outsource or partner on the development of the tech involved.

While 30 percent stated that there is a negative chance that the two will split into separate bonafide investment channels.  The varied goals and business models of each vertical farming operation will limit the growth able to be achieved by tech companies looking to supply the framework.

Although it seems that we are collectively on the fence on this question, there has been more than one deal this month that indicates a growing chance that vertical farming and the tech that supports the industry will indeed divide into two distinct investment channels.

In the early days of the month, Agtech Intel reported that INNO-3B raised US$4.5 million in Seed funding from a host of Canadian institutional investors.

Headquartered in Quebec and Ontario, INNO-3B designs and manufactures innovative robotic solution platforms for the indoor vertical production of high-density crops. The company offers fully automated, scalable, remotely monitored, and controlled growing systems that can reduce greenhouse gas emissions generated from vertical agriculture. Its systems can be established in any location, whether it be urban or rural, and the company also offers deep agronomic knowledge and support through its in-house agronomic expertise.

Two weeks later, UK-based aeroponic tech developer LettUs Grow announced it had raised funding totaling £1 million (US$1.3million) from a combination of private and public backers.

Founded in 2015 LettUs Grow has designed a patent-pending aeroponic tech system that has shown to produce leafy greens, salad crops, and herbs at a growth rate that is 70 percent above existing solutions. Through its platform, crops are grown with their roots suspended in a nutrient-dense mist, resulting in growth rates that surpass conventional hydroponics, produce predictable and consistent yields without the use of chemicals, all while using 95 percent less water compared to traditional farming.

And although not directly associated with vertical farming per se, on January 25, Agtech Intel shared the launch of a $30 million cannabis tech fund being launched in partnership by Israel-based global investment platform OurCrowd and U.S.-based 7thirty Opportunity Fund – a development that reflects  a focus on the tech associated with indoor production. 

It is understood that the funding rounds mentioned here are Seed rounds, and are not yet to the scale that would make those in the investment field stop and take notice.  However, they do indicate the beginnings of investors seeing vertical and indoor farming tech developers as being worthy of capital in-and-of themselves.

I see our respondents’ views aligning with what the deals indicate. Although, as a whole we are on the fence, a full 70 percent of respondents believe that the two activities of vertical farming and the tech that supports it, are either possibly, or definitely dividing into two distinct investment channels.

Stay connected with Agtech Intel throughout 2019 as we see if this trend gains momentum in the coming months.

-Lynda Kiernan

Lynda Kiernan is Editor with GAI Media and daily contributor to GAI News. If you would like to submit a contribution for consideration, please contact Ms. Kiernan at lkiernan@globalaginvesting.com.

 

The post GAI News Agtech Intel Question of the Month Wrap-Up – January 2019 appeared first on Global AgInvesting.

Horizon Capital Closes Third Ukraine Fund Oversubscribed at $200M

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U.S.-based private equity firm Horizon Capital announced that it has closed its third Ukraine investment fund, the Emerging Europe Growth Fund III (EEGF III), at its hard cap of $200 million, exceeding its target of $150 million.

EEGF III was launched with a strategy to back export-focused companies leveraging Ukraine’s cost-competitive standing in food and agriculture, IT, and light manufacturing. Domestically, the fund also pursues investments in the high-growth segments of consumer goods, pharma, healthcare, e-commerce, and financial services. Over the next two-to-three years, EEGF III will be looking to make investments in these areas ranging between $5 million and $20 million each.

Led by co-founding partners Lenna Koszarny and Jeffrey C Neal, and senior partner Denis Tafintsev, Horizon manages more than $850 million in assets from investors representing a capital base of $350 billion. All told, the firm’s three Ukraine funds have invested more than $650 million to date in 140 companies.

This closing of EEGF III represents the largest private equity closing targeting investment in Ukraine in 10 years.

“This fund is a testament to our long-term, valued investor relationships, our strong team of talented professionals and export-focused investment strategy, and our solid track record of successful investing in this country,” said Lenna Koszarny, founding partner and CEO of Horizon Capital. “Since our first close last year, the new fund has already made six compelling investments and will close many more exciting deals in the years to come.”

Launched with an anchor investment from Western NIS Enterprise Fund,  one-third of the capital raised for EEGF III originated from institutional investors, foundations, family offices, and other private investors including the EBRD, FMO, IFC, PROPARO, EDG, and IFU. Existing investors from Horizon’s prior funds have provided approximately 55 percent of the commitments, and U.S. and EU-based investors account for about 35 percent of of the total capital raised. The remainder was raised from other international investors.

“Our fundraising success should send a strong signal that Ukraine offers tremendous rewards for those willing to look past the headlines,” said Koszarny.

This statement aligns with sentiments expressed by consultant Michael DeSa, who in the piece  Investing in Ukraine: Will Fortune Favor the Bold, written for the GAI Gazette and published in November 2018, said, “Ukraine’s agricultural production capability is often overshadowed by the country’s civil conflict and lack of business transparency. However, a closer look at this strategically-positioned agricultural powerhouse reveals there is ample opportunity for growth to meet the world’s increasing food requirements.”

The vast potential for profit and growth in Ukraine is rooted in the fact that the country is currently not producing near its potential. Given the development and integration of new technologies and the adoption of land reforms, together with Ukraine’s advantageous geographic location, superior soils, large labor pool, and low cost per unit of production, the country poses a channel of opportunity.

“Under Lenna Koszarny’s leadership and with our talented deal partners Denis Tafintsev, Vasile Tofan and Konstantin Magaletskyi, Horizon Capital has reached new heights,” said Jeffrey Neal, founding partner and chairman of the Investment Committee, Horizon Capital. “I am confident in our team’s ability to back visionary founders and deliver solid returns to our investors.”

-Lynda Kiernan

Lynda Kiernan is Editor with GAI Media and daily contributor to GAI News. If you would like to submit a contribution for consideration, please contact Ms. Kiernan at lkiernan@globalaginvesting.com.

The post Horizon Capital Closes Third Ukraine Fund Oversubscribed at $200M appeared first on Global AgInvesting.

FoodMaven Raises $10M to Fund For-Profit, For-Impact Food Waste Platform

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FoodMaven, a food waste mitigation technology platform, announced it has raised $10 million in capital through a round backed by Tao Capital and members of the Walton family, the founders of Walmart.

Based in Colorado and founded in 2015, FoodMaven captures food being wasted through a systemic network that is oversupplied and out-of-sync, or locally produced without access to a market, and then creates a marketplace through which to sell it.

Through an online platform, FoodMaven sells this recaptured food to restaurants, universities, and hotels, or alternatively donates it to hunger-relief initiatives, meeting its mission to ensure that all food is used to a good purpose.

This round follows upon an $8.6 million Series A raised by the company in January 2018. Just prior to the company’s Series A, former CEO of Whole Foods Walter Robb joined the company’s board as an investor, reports FoodBev.

“We are deeply grateful for our investment partners who share our vision of a for-profit, for-impact company, addressing issues in the food system that leads to so much food waste,” said Patrick Bultema, chairman, CEO and co-founder of FoodMaven.

FoodMaven has seen rapid growth, and this round is being used by the company to fund the company’s strategy of purchasing complementary food businesses as it enters new markets. Under this business model, FoodMaven recently announced the closing of Anderson Beef in Denver, and its plans to expand into the Dallas, Texas, market later this year.

“This financing provides support for growing into additional markets this year, as we also ramp up our investment in technology and innovations,” said Bultema.

As part of the deal, Isaac Pritzker, principal of Tao Capital Partners, will join the FoodMaven board.

“It is a pleasure to join such a passionate group of brilliant people working to address the elimination of food waste in the pursuit of a sufficient and sustainable global food system,” said Pritzker.

Pritzker will be joining Walter Robb, as well as  Lauren Baron from Walton Enterprises; Nancy Phillips, former CEO and executive chair of Flexential; venture investor and co-founder of Galvanize, Chris Onan; and Patrick Bultema, chairman, CEO and co-founder of FoodMaven. Also active on the board in the role of observers are certain Walton family members and Rob Lewis, who is representing Seed investors.

“I’m also thrilled to have Isaac Pritzker join us,” said Bultema. “It’s clear Isaac, as well as Tao Capital, have both deep expertise and passion for transforming food for the better. He is a great addition to the board, that already represents so much credibility and impact in the food industry.”

~ Lynda Kiernan

Lynda Kiernan is Editor with GAI Media and daily contributor to GAI News. If you would like to submit a contribution for consideration, please contact Ms. Kiernan at lkiernan@globalaginvesting.com.

The post FoodMaven Raises $10M to Fund For-Profit, For-Impact Food Waste Platform appeared first on Global AgInvesting.


GAI News AgInvesting Weekly Question of the Month Wrap-Up – January 2019

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GAI News AgInvesting Weekly Question of the Month Wrap-Up – January 2019

One of the top trending ag and investing topics as we venture into 2019 is the legalization of industrial hemp production in the U.S.  In your opinion, how much of an impact on the ag investment space will this development have?

The even split in responses to this question really surprised me.

Exactly 42.1 percent of respondents stated that the legalization of industrial hemp production in the U.S. would have a significant effect on ag investment – opening new channels of investment, new markets, new ancillary investment opportunities, and would offer greater ability to diversify portfolios.

Meanwhile, exactly 42.1 percent of respondents stated that legalization of industrial hemp production in the U.S. would have somewhat of an effect on ag investment. New investment channels are always a good development, but production volumes will not be enough to translate into big changes for the ag investment space.

The remaining 15.8 percent of respondents stated that legalization will have only a minor impact on ag investment, stating that investors will likely hold back capital until there is federal legalization of cannabis.

All told, 84.2 percent of our respondents believe that legalization will have a certain degree of positive effect on ag investment. This positive effect is already being seen played out in New York State.

Following the passage of the 2018 Farm Bill allowing for the commercial production of hemp, Canadian marijuana company Canopy Growth announced its plans to invest up to $150 million to establish its first production facility in the U.S.

The Hemp Industrial Park project will include large-scale production capabilities focused on product manufacturing, and is expected to result in tons of hemp extract produced per year. Once the site is established, Canopy will source its hemp from U.S. farmers and will act as the anchor business at the location. However, third party businesses can join the innovative vertically integrated hemp ecosystem from cropping, to seed, to fiber, and more.

The scale of this project, the political support it has rapidly garnered in New York, and its structure under which additional third-party businesses can join in creating a vertically integrated hub, could be seen as a single reflection of the latent potential in legal U.S. hemp production.

The $150 million project can also be seen as an albatross signaling solid investment ground ahead in the hemp category for all of our positive thinkers out there.  Bravo!

~ Lynda Kiernan

Lynda Kiernan is Editor with GAI Media and daily contributor to GAI News. If you would like to submit a contribution for consideration, please contact Ms. Kiernan at lkiernan@globalaginvesting.com.

The post GAI News AgInvesting Weekly Question of the Month Wrap-Up – January 2019 appeared first on Global AgInvesting.

Teachers’ Retirement System of Louisiana Creates $100M Separate Account with AgIS

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The Teachers’ Retirement System of Louisiana (TRSL) has established a $100 million separate account with Boston-based private equity firm AgIS.

During a recent board meeting, the $19.7 billion pension fund confirmed that the separate account would be focused on investing in permanent crops and related infrastructure in North America, noting that permanent crops “exhibit higher cash yields” and produce returns based on income generation as opposed to land appreciation.

A second announcement made by TRSL indicates that the fund has expanded another of its separate accounts held with Hancock Agricultural Investment Group (HAIG) by $25 million. The account, which focuses on the U.S. and Australia, was originated in 2016 with an initial $75 million on the recommendation of TRSL’s investment consultant Hamilton Lane. Currently, the account is allocated 67 percent to investments in the U.S., 20 percent in Australia, with the remaining 13 percent to be earmarked for investments in permanent crops in the U.S.

This is the second pension fund to establish a separate account with AgIS in the past 16 months.

In September 2017, the Virginia Retirement System (VRS) engaged AgIS to manage a $150 million separate account – marking the first time a pension fund awarded a separate account in the ag investing space.

These agreements are indicative of the confidence had in AgIS, and are reflective of the caliber of the firm and its founder Jeff Conrad.

Born and raised on a dairy farm in Pennsylvania, Conrad went on to attend Penn State University and to study agricultural business management and agricultural economics at Cornell University. In 1990 he founded, and was subsequently president of Hancock Agricultural Investment Group (HAIG), a globally renowned organization that grew to control more than $2 billion in properties and capital on behalf of institutional investors.

During his tenure with HAIG, noticing that the farmland investment class lacked a proper benchmark, Conrad co-chaired the establishment of the NCREIF Farmland Index in 1995. Today the NCREIF is a widely relied upon tool that includes data from 743 agricultural properties with a combined market value of $8 billion as of December 31, 2016. And as the asset class has matured, so has the NCREIF with it – now able to offer insight into the performance of agricultural properties by crop type – whether row or permanent crop – and by commodity type, or management structure.

After retiring from HAIG in 2011, Conrad re-entered the ring, launching Boston-based private equity firm AgIS in 2013.

*To hear more from Conrad, click here to read A Decade in the Farmland Asset Class Evolution, written last year and published in our GAI Gazette prior to him being a key speaker at Global AgInvesting 2018.

-Lynda Kiernan

Lynda Kiernan is Editor with GAI Media and daily contributor to GAI News. If you would like to submit a contribution for consideration, please contact Ms. Kiernan at lkiernan@globalaginvesting.com.

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International Farming Corp. Acquires Three Tree Fruit Companies, Forms Columbia River Orchards

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North Carolina-based ag investment firm International Farming Corporation (IFC) has acquired three Washington State tree fruit companies: Legacy Fruit Packers, Valley Fruit, and Larson Fruit. The three companies that were owned by the Larson and Verbrugge families will be combined to create a single new company, Columbia River Orchards.

Included in the acquisition are 4,000 acres of orchards, two packing facilities with the capacity for four million boxes of fruit per year, and interests in the Sage Fruit marketing company located in Yakima, Washington, and Pacific Coast Cherry Packers in Wapato, Washington.

Backed by Billions

Rooted in North Carolina agribusiness dating back to 1827, IFC is an agricultural manager with a team experienced in agricultural production in the America, Africa, and Eastern Europe. Through leveraging deep ag production knowledge, multi-generational industry relationships, thorough understanding of vertical integration within the farm value chain, and an innovative in-house agtech solutions platform, IFC’s team of PhD’s in Agricultural Sciences, certified professional agricultural engineers, certified crop advisors, and licensed crop consultants is able to often source off-market deals, and successfully manage institutional farmland operations and their ancillary assets for its investors.

In September 2018, IFC announced it was planning to raise $1.5 billion for its IFC Core Farmland Fund – an open-ended vehicle focused on investing in U.S. farming operations.

Over the long term, through the Core Farmland Fund, IFC is aiming to realize both income and capital growth through investment in a range of row, permanent, and speciality crop farms that offer diversity by geography, management, and associated factors such as storage capabilities or irrigation.

A long-range view is being taken with Columbia River Orchards as well, with the company planning on making “substantial investments in orchard and packing technology to produce the highest quality fruit for our customers…” These investments also will cover expanding and developing further acreage in the coming years, and will be used to support the company’s current 3,000 seasonal and full-time employees, as well as for team expansion in the future.

Ripe For Consolidation

As far back as the end of December 2017, industry watchers were noting that the Washington State tree fruit sector was set for a shift toward consolidation.  With an oversupply of both cherries and apples, and crowded with too many packing houses, Michael Butler, CEO of Cascadia Capital in Seattle, said that the tree fruit industry was bound to see a higher level of consolidation over the coming 24 months, as packing houses were running below capacity.

Butler went on to note that mid-sized fruit companies with orchards smaller than 1,500 acres that are not vertically integrated, and are running at or below 30 percent capacity, are at the highest risk of being swept up through consolidation, reported Capital Press.

“They all have potential but there’s not room for all of them,” he said.

-Lynda Kiernan 

Lynda Kiernan is Editor with GAI Media and daily contributor to GAI News. If you would like to submit a contribution for consideration, please contact Ms. Kiernan at lkiernan@globalaginvesting.com.

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New Jersey State Investment Council Commits $100M to Homestead Capital

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New Jersey’s $70 billion public-employee pension manager, the New Jersey State Investment Council, has agreed to commit $100 million in Homestead Capital’s third fund.

Founded in 2012 by co-founders and co-CEOs Gabe Santos and Daniel Little in San Francisco, California, and with offices in Idaho, Illinois, and Arkansas, Homestead Capital is focused on investing and operating farms throughout the Mountain West, Delta, Midwest, and Pacific regions of the United States.

Since its inception, Homestead has launched two prior investment funds. In the last quarter of 2016, the firm announced that it had closed its second fund – Homestead Capital USA Farmland Fund II at $400 million. This fund, which surpassed its initial target of $350 million to close oversubscribed, more than doubled the firm’s first fund – Homestead Capital USA Farmland Fund I which closed in 2015 at $173 million. Currently, the firm is raising a targeted $600 million for its third fund.

Bottoms Up for Sustainability

Partnering a “bottom-up” approach to sourcing and value creation, which is driven by Homestead’s locally engaged farmland managers, with a “top-down” course for portfolio construction and risk management, Homestead is able to deliver a properly diversified portfolio with an appropriate risk and reward profile.

This investment by the New Jersey pension system represents its first in a fund that targets U.S.-based farmland. As such, Homestead was chosen due to the alignment of the firm with the pensions’ ethos of investing with socially-conscious concerns in mind.

Through an investment process that considers “labor, sustainable farming, and the environment,” Homestead is mindful of “…issues that relate to climate change and the scarcity of water” through its diligence and management. Using a proprietary software platform for modeling asset returns that accounts for yields, soil quality, climate patterns, commodity prices, and other factors, Homestead is able to manage concentration risk at the portfolio level, according to the firm’s website.

When asked about sustainability practices, Santos told GAI News, “The ones we employ are varied, depending on the type of farm we’re investing in. For example, water efficiency; we can deploy capital to make irrigation systems more efficient. More precise allocation of water can enable us to change crop rotation to a more profitable crop. Other sustainable practices we can use include variable rate of application of fertilizer, no-till farming and the use of cover crops.”

A First-String Team

Another driver for New Jersey noted as being behind the significant investment in Homestead is the financial knowledge and deep experience of the firm’s executive team.

“Each of us has had a relationship with agriculture,” Little told GAI News back in 2015 upon the final close of the firm’s inaugural fund at $173 million. “I’m from Ohio, I have a farm there, and, as a career fund manager at J.P. Morgan, I grew an appreciation for the attributes that farmland has as an asset class. Gary has spent his career in agriculture, managing farms and consulting on projects globally. Gabe was involved in Goldman Sachs’ natural resources and agriculture group, where he did mergers and acquisitions in the ag space.”

In January of last year Homestead further added to its team, announcing that Patrick Trainor had been named Homestead’s new vice president and head of acquisitions, and Kyle Jacobs had been appointed as vice president of due diligence.

Prior to this appointment with Homestead, Trainor served as executive vice president and head of portfolio management with TIAA subsidiary, Westchester Group Investment Management Inc. where he oversaw portfolio construction, the management and reporting for all client accounts and funds, and served on Westchester’s Global Investment Committee. Prior to serving in this capacity, Trainor served as director of acquisitions for Westchester’s U.S. Row Crop business and the head of the Midwest region.

Jacobs brings more than 15 years of ‘boots on the ground’ experience to Homestead, having been instrumental in growing his family farming operation into a leader in the Mountain West region of the U.S. His experience provides Homestead with a vast agricultural network, as well as a deep knowledge of multiple crops including corn, potatoes, barley, wheat, triticale, and alfalfa.

“Patrick and Kyle join at a pivotal time for Homestead as we continue to invest and manage our row and permanent crop farmland portfolio,” said Santos last year. “Kyle’s background in production agriculture and Patrick’s broad transaction experience provide Homestead with the right combination of skills necessary to create long-term value for our investors.”

-Lynda Kiernan

Lynda Kiernan is Editor with GAI Media and daily contributor to GAI News. If you would like to submit a contribution for consideration, please contact Ms. Kiernan at lkiernan@globalaginvesting.com.

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MotorLeaf Strategic Partnership to See Mainstreaming of Greenhouse Automation Through AI

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Montreal-based AI agtech startup MotorLeaf is launching a strategic partnership with Greenhouse supplier Cultilene to facilitate greater access to artificial intelligence for growers facing tight margins and labor shortages. Together, the companies announced a global expansion campaign to connect large-scale growers of hydroponic tomatoes and peppers with AI-automation services.

Brought to market last year, MotorLeaf’s technology can gather big data generated from greenhouse growing conditions, which can then be used to create custom-made machine learning algorithms to predict future greenhouse production volumes. With this knowledge in-hand, growers can gain insights once reserved for highly-skilled agronomists and technicians, and are better able to streamline their operations and reduce costs while also reducing the risks associated with varying weekly harvests.

“We are convinced that Motorleaf’s harvest forecast service has added value for tomato and pepper growers worldwide,” said Mariëlle Klijn, marketing manager at Cultilene, and a key person in forming the partnership with MotorLeaf. “That is why we are actively bringing this service to the attention of our customers. In addition, this harvest forecast service is a perfect example of ‘data-driven growing’, one of the most pioneering developments within the global horticulture sector and a cornerstone objective of Cultilene.”

Current methods of predicting harvest volumes are typically manual, imprecise, and time-consuming, and because of varying conditions and fluctuations in growth and ripening, can be prone to error.  By using data gathered from growing conditions and from past harvests to train AI technology, businesses can know how much produce they will be delivering to market at any given time.

In the piece, Artificial Intelligence Enables Greenhouses to Cut Costs, Streamline Operations, with Precise, Automated Harvest Forecasts contributed by MotorLeaf to GAI News and shared in October 2018, the company provides an example of the power of AI automation to improve greenhouse agriculture.

“Once implemented at SunSelect Produce — a 70-acre greenhouse in California — the AI technology reduced errors in estimating weekly tomato yields by 50 percent at the start; following one year, the greenhouse now benefits from a 72 percent  reduction in error. Such precision enabled the company to fully automate harvest forecasting.”

In addition to its predictive abilities, MotorLeaf states that AI can also address the threatening issue of labor shortages in the agricultural sector across the U.S. and the EU. The lack of both skilled and unskilled labor has had a demonstrative effect on growers in Canada, where it is estimated that by 2025 the industry will lose 100,000 workers, and in Ireland, where agricultural output declined by 14 percent last year due to insufficient labor.

In May 2018, MotorLeaf closed on a US$2.85 million funding round backed by Desjardins Capital, Real Ventures, Fluxunit (Osram Ventures), BDC Capital, and 500 Startups Canada.

At that time, there were 52.3 billion square feet of greenhouses and indoor farms that could benefit from Motorleaf’s technology, according to the company. And Cultilene estimates that there are hundreds of greenhouse operations on both sides of the Atlantic that could benefit from MotorLeaf’s services.

“Agriculture is totally different from the tech sector,” said Jennifer De Braga, head of Global Client Experience at Motorleaf. Tech companies are expected to scale with ease using online platforms and digital tools. The fact is that farming remains a personal industry that prefers to seal deals with a handshake between well-known neighbours. Cultilene enables us to make that handshake with greenhouse owners far and wide.”

A year of preparations have been dedicated to building out the partnership to ensure the alignment of data security regulations between Canada and the EU and to vet the technology. And now the two companies can strive to join the expertise of a Dutch greenhouse specialist with the AI technology advances being made in Canada.

-Lynda Kiernan  

Lynda Kiernan is Editor with GAI Media and daily contributor to GAI News. If you would like to submit a contribution for consideration, please contact Ms. Kiernan at lkiernan@globalaginvesting.com.

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15 Minutes With…Tai Lin, Managing Director at Proterra Investment Partners

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By Michelle Pelletier Marshall, GAI Media

Lin-TaiTai Lin is a managing director at Proterra Investment Partners, the $2.4 billion private equity firm that was spun off from Cargill’s Black River Asset Management in 2016. Proterra – which has offices in Minneapolis, Shanghai, Singapore, Mumbai, Sydney, Sao Paulo, and London – focuses primarily on investments in food and agriculture.

Working out of offices in Shanghai and Singapore, Lin directs the company’s food sector investments across China and Southeast Asia, and has been instrumental in building Proterra’s growth across Asia. In 2017, Proterra had over half of its total assets under management invested in China, Indonesia, India, Thailand, and the Philippines.

Lin has over 16 years of private equity investment and M&A experience, which includes a managing director post with Black River Asset Management. He spent multiple years in M&A investment banking in Hong Kong, London, and New York, during which time he worked on various transactions involving Asian markets and companies.

Lin currently serves on the board of numerous companies in the food and agriculture sector, including NR Instant, FKS Food & Agri, Guilin Seamild, PFI Foods, Golden Maple, Phoenix Eggs, and Riverstone Farms. He is a graduate of Vienna University of Economics in Austria.

GAI News caught up with Lin during his recent visit to Boston.

Global M&A totaled $3.6 trillion in 2016 with Asian and European countries favored as the epicenter due to a pro-deal receptive environment. Have you seen this hold true for agriculture, and what are the micro and macro-economic driving forces?

Overall, it appears that the global agribusiness sector is increasingly becoming a more corporatized business. Over the last 10 to 15 years we’ve seen – especially in emerging Asia and countries like China, India, and most in Southeast Asia – increased professionalism where families and farmers are handling more corporate-like activities. We believe the reason this is happening is the growth of population and demand, which in turn makes for larger companies that ultimately need a way to operate in a more structured manner. Further, the market is becoming more sophisticated as is the consumer, and agribusinesses are faced with a more competitive environment. Many of these traditional family businesses are now quite interested in partnering with larger overseas or Asian companies because they can provide additional value via brands, networks, or capital.

Additionally, Asia in general is an agri-commodity deficit region, and imports much of its soft commodities and food products. We believe the gap that has been created by the consumer demand for food and the inability or increased cost of producing those products, makes companies in Asia seek overseas options to procure their raw materials or food products. As they do this, it increases their partnerships with foreign groups, leading to M&A opportunities.

With this rising confidence in mergers and acquisitions in ag, where does Proterra see the most potential for M&A in Asia, as far as region and ag category?

With regards to the activities of the Food Strategy, which is focused on meeting food demand, we see emerging Asia as the biggest, strongest driving force in the growth for food globally. The areas we are focused on are China, India, and Southeast Asia.

China is a crowded market when it comes to foreign investments and M&A. If you look back 20 years within the food space in China, the focus was on food security and quantity – more was better; 10 years ago the focus was food safety. Today, the focus has appeared to move on to premiumization of foods, which means higher quality, more nutrition, more transparent as to where it comes from and how it’s made, more convenient, and more value-added. This change in consumer play means that many companies need to shift their strategy – where you were once a pure producer, now you need to think more about how to market, package, and make your product more convenient. In our opinion, this shift creates additional opportunities in M&A where you see a midstream player team up with a downstream company, and more joint ventures formed. You see big retail platforms team up with agricultural companies to help them sell their product better. We believe that this is driving M&A in the agribusiness space for China.

In Southeast Asia, we also foresee increased M&A opportunities. There we see most businesses run by families, built up over generations. There’s a changing of the guards where the next generation – the older millennials – are taking over, and they have different ideas for the business. They want to professionalize it, make it more attractive, and move more to B2C, which fuels M&A activities because this new generation is very open to input from the outside. They want foreign strategic or financial player input, which is very different from the traditional businesses of this area.

In India, our local investment team sees a strong consumer growth story driven by millennials. Surveys show that India is expected to have one of the fastest growing economies for the next 10 years, and even though they won’t reach the levels of China in terms of size and GDP, the growth in food consumption will still be a major growth driver for the consumption bucket of the overall economy for the next decade or more.

Proterra has its hand in many deals, such as last year’s divestiture of Goondiwindi Aggregation in Australia, 2017’s $100 million investment in Indonesia’s FKS Food & Agri, and the sale of the company’s stake in India’s Dodla Dairy Ltd. in 2016. How does Proterra go about evaluating these opportunities?

I can’t comment on the Australia divestiture as I was not directly involved, but it’s a positive event for Proterra and a nice achievement for the company and the team.

As far as the investment of FKS in Indonesia, it was relatively big for the country and the sector. If you think about Indonesia – where most studies predict it will be the fourth largest economy in the world very soon – we are seeing a “curious” situation. Curious in that it is a country that is huge – 268 million people – and it has many natural resources such as oil, gas, copper, gold and more, but for ecological reasons doesn’t have the ability to produce enough of its own food. FKS is the company who has leading market positions in origination, logistics, import handling, and distribution of most food commodities – soybeans, soymeal, sugar. It is the only company with a nationwide footprint of warehouses, providing, in our opinion, the best platform for the Indonesian supply and demand deficit for food and agri.

With Dodla Dairy, we took them to visit dairy farms in China where certain funds had made investments, and both parties were impressed with each other, so we decided to partner. Dodla has seven factories where they process the milk, purchasing it from tens of thousands of villages and farmers, oftentimes in very small volumes. This company provides an important livelihood for thousands of families, which is one of the reasons that when we exited Dodla, the buyer was a leading global impact investor. We are very proud of the financial and societal returns with Dodla.

Our strategy for our growth private equity Food Strategy sees us being more than just a shareholder – we need to be a driver of progressive change.

Has the U.S-China trade war affected food sector investments in the regions Proterra serves? If so, how, and what is the market doing to counter this?

Yes, there has been an impact from the trade war, however, there are good and bad things happening.

The trade war has certainly created havoc with commodity prices. Soybean prices are up and as a result in China, for example, feed prices for livestock is up so you would figure the cost of production would go up as well. But what companies are doing to counter this is to reformulate their feed and procure soybeans from other places, such as Argentina. There are all sorts of counter-measures being used. The net/net of it is that you can counteract the increase in soybean prices somewhat but you cannot remove the whole negative impact (for livestock).

My more important point is that this trade war is not as big of a deal. What makes the Chinese economy or a company perform well or not – is determined by 100 factors – and the trade war fallout is just one of them. The media currently talks about the U.S. trade war nine out of 10 times when it talks about things that matter to the Chinese economy, but it’s just not true that this trade dispute represents 90 percent of what impacts China’s economy overall. Ninety-nine other factors determine whether the economy or a company does well or not, and soybean prices is just one of these. In short, we believe it doesn’t matter as much as you would think to the individual company and when it does, it could actually be a good thing as well.

The primary impact of the trade discussions is that U.S. farmers can no longer sell their soybeans as well, and the Chinese livestock farmers are suddenly faced with higher prices, so no one is happy. The secondary impact is that in countries like Argentina and Brazil, they have seen their soybean prices go up 20 percent and they should be jumping for joy and cultivating more and more acreage and investing in logistics and the supply chain. China has a strategy now to diversify away from the U.S. and create new procurement relationships. So even if the trade war settles down in the next 90 days, you might not return to a previous normal because the landscape might have shifted somewhat. China might try and buy less from the U.S. and more from other areas going forward and that might shape the global soybean trade in the longer term. Livestock farmers in China too will likely have figured out more alternative substitutes.

More and more investors consider ESG standards before choosing investments for their portfolios. How has Proterra aligned itself with this growing sentiment and incorporated it into its target investment search?

ESG is very important to our firm. What I find a little frustrating with the current ESG topic is that everybody talks about it and says it’s important, but defining it is more complicated, and whether it makes sense in certain cases, especially when dealing in emerging markets, is a difficult question. For example, we were interested in investing in a banana/cocoa plantation in one of the poorest regions of the Philippines, but we said if we are to invest they would have to remove the under-aged workers. My contact said we will do as you say, but please know that if we send them home, their family will have no income and she and her sisters will have to stop going to school and be forced to do the worst jobs to make money. He asked if this is what we wanted? It’s all good intentioned, and it’s the right thing to do, but we have more work to do to refine and understand exactly what is good and what is bad when it comes to emerging markets.

Having said that, we conduct ESG due diligence on every potential deal, and we’ve rejected several deals for not meeting our required standards. We request annual certifications, we pay outside consultants to help our companies, we make periodic ESG reports, and we quantify the benefits of ESG activities of the companies we have partnered with. This is a very important topic that we continue to push and examine.

What sets Proterra apart from other private equity firms?

 There are not a lot of sizeable, pan-regional PE firms that are focused on food and agriculture. The focus on the sector makes a difference as we navigate our deals – it’s easy for us to find operators, we know people in the right places, and we can easily make the connections.

Another thing we’ve successfully undertaken several times is to build companies from the ground up. We seek to hire established management teams and then set up legal entities and fund them so that these teams can build up new industry-leading companies. These “greenfield” investments have been quite successful, and we have built industry leaders in this way. This is something we are proud of and is not easily duplicated by financial investors.

Michelle Pelletier Marshall is managing editor for Global AgInvesting’s quarterly GAI Gazette magazine and a regular contributor to GAI News. She can be reached at mmarshall@globalaginvesting.com.

 

 

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15 Minutes With… Sotiris Bantas, CEO of Centaur Analytics

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By Michelle Pelletier Marshall, GAI Media

With the goal of providing safe, abundant, and affordable food, California-based startup Centaur Analytics seeks to end post-harvest crop losses, reclaiming the estimated $1 trillion of crop value wasted each year to improper storage and spoilage to “create” more food for the ever-increasing world population.

According to co-founder, president, and CEO Sotiris Bantas, the Centaur Internet-of-Crops Platform gives food and commodity industries an unprecedented capacity to track, monitor, and understand the quality of the world’s food when stored, transported, and delivered to shelves. With as much as 50 to 60 percent of cereal grains lost during storage, this new technology – which is based on smart wireless sensors, data analytics, and advanced modeling software – can address this challenge and reduce post-harvest losses.

In October 2018, the company raised $3 million from a consortium of investors led by early-stage tech investor Marathon Venture Capital, and including Detia Degesch Group, and the Israeli-American serial entrepreneur Avi Reichental.

We talked with Bantas at year’s end to see what the future holds for Centaur.

1. The Centaur sensor is unique in that it provides wireless monitoring from inside the storage core to ensure end-to-end visibility of the supply chain. Can you please explain how this works and benefits farmers?

To achieve the most accurate readings, Centaur’s sensors have been engineered to sit within the grain mass in nearly any type of grain storage (silo, grain bags, grain piles, etc.). This is critically important because we view this as the only approach for users – whether farmers or elevator operators or even grain millers – to understand and predict in advance all of the potential quality and spoilage risks impacting the grain throughout storage as its transits the supply chain. Our sensors transmit readings wirelessly at regular intervals to our system, giving a full picture of how the grain is stored.

With the sensor inside the storage, we are able to detect very subtle changes. When coupled with our digital simulation capabilities of each storage bin, we use these small changes to determine what is happening throughout the entire grain mass. With very accurate readings in the right places, and incorporating other available information about the condition of the storage, such as location, weather, solar, and wind, this enables us to produce highly accurate digital models at thousands of points within the entire grain mass.

Traditional monitoring systems, such as silo cables or sampling, can do an adequate job of detecting the grain within an inch or two of the measurement. However, this is only a fraction of areas where problems and spoilage can occur in grain. A point-sampling approach is great if you are lucky enough to end up having a silo cable sensor hanging right next to the point where a hotspot develops. But, if not, major problems can go undetected. We knew a better solution was possible. With our system, the farmer or grain operator can understand the grain condition at every point in the grain mass and know the risks faced in the weeks and months ahead. They are able to use this real time view in a modern way, accessing it via their mobile phone or computer, or integrating this information into their other planning systems.

2. Your aim to enhance post-harvest grain quality and marketability with this new predictive and cognitive technology is admirable. How has the product performed and driven results thus far?

We are seeing strong interest at all levels of the grains supply chain – whether on-farm, such as in a silo and grain bags, or all the way up to the grain piles of major grain companies. In general, I would say our customers are still early adopters for now, looking for an edge, looking to improve their margins with premium quality, deal with limited labor resources, and improve their ability to manage risk. When we look at the grains industry, we see an industry that has not substantially changed in literally 30 to 40 years.  This always amazes me. Nearly all of the world’s major supply chains from other industries have successfully and profitably adopted advanced enterprise resource planning (ERP) systems or other advanced tools to analyze every aspect of their supply chain. Yet, why isn’t this true to the same extent for the grain supply chain, by connecting farms with elevators, all of the way up to the operations of major grain companies to provide a real time view of quantity, quality, characteristics, and marketability in a modern way? This is coming soon.

3. What companies are currently using the Centaur Sensor, and what are your growth predictions? Will the product be available in the U.S. as well as internationally?

Our Internet-of-CropsTM platform and sensors are growing nicely, as we find many counter intuitive aspects to the grains industry. In many ways, outside the U.S., crop loss and spoilage receive a greater top of mind acknowledgement as being a major issue to be solved. This helps our growth internationally. Yet, in the U.S., while having somewhat reduced physical losses, the actual financial value missed from quality slippage (a lost opportunity to sell the higher quality grain which initially came off the field) is massive for farmers and grain companies. We have installations in about 15 countries, and will soon add more countries. Between the U.S., Argentina, across the EU, Africa, India, and even in Costa Rica with our existing projects, we have set our sights on solving loss wherever it exists. As we say, we are building a global, post-harvest quality chain, and there are substantial steps waiting to be achieved.

Detia Degesch Group, a major global chemicals manufacturer and provider of fumigants and pest treatments, has been a significant supporter of us. This has helped us greatly to validate our products in the early phases, ensure they are robust enough to withstand adverse conditions inside storage environments, understand the impacts of pests and validate our models, and gain insights into the key challenges of the global food and agriproduct supply chain.

4. The $3 million investment round is being used to expand your base of connected sensors worldwide and extend functionality. What is the expectation for future rounds?

We see a change coming among grain producers and grain suppliers as more technology reaches the post-harvest grain supply chain. A point is coming, if we are not already there now, when farmers and grain companies alike will aggressively compete on quality, not just purely shipping on volume of standardized commodities. This will involve preserving the identity of all of the aspects affecting the grain from planting, and tracking this throughout the post-harvest. We believe Centaur is best placed to lead this era of change. We anticipate future funding rounds over the next year to ensure we can seize this opportunity and are best positioned to benefit from this evolution.

To learn more about Centaur Analytics, visit www.centaur.ag.

ABOUT SOTIRIS BANTAS

Bantas is co-founder, president, and CEO of Centaur Analytics. He is experienced in bringing technology startups to multi-million dollar global accounts, as he did for his prior software company, Helic, Inc. He holds a PhD. in microelectronics and a degree in electrical engineering from the National Technical University of Athens. 

Michelle Pelletier Marshall is managing editor for Global AgInvesting’s quarterly GAI Gazette magazine and a regular contributor to GAI News. She can be reached at mmarshall@globalaginvesting.com.

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MycoTechnology Raises High-Profile $30M Series C

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Colorado-based mushroom-focused food tech startup MycoTechnology announced it has closed on a Series C backed by some of the top names in food tech investment.

The $30 million round was co-led by S2G Ventures Fund II, Middleland MT Holdings, ADM Capital’s Cibus Fund, and TML-Invest S.à r.l. Other participating investors include Tysons Ventures, Bunge Ventures Limited, Continental Grain Company, Eighteen94 Capital, LLC (Kellogg’s), and DNS-Hiitake LLC.

“MycoTechnology’s innovative organic technology addresses growing consumer demand for products focused on health and sustainability, and Kellogg’s is excited to continue to partner with the company in a number of ways,” said Gary Pilnick, vice chairman of Kellogg’s.

Founded in 2013 Dr. Brooks Kelly, Jim Langan, Peter Lubar, and Alan Hahn, MycoTechnology has pioneered the development of a variety of innovative organic food processing platform using mushroom roots (mycelium). Although the full range of possibilities for their technology is not yet known, the company has used their platform to solve some of the toughest challenges faced by the food and beverage industries.

Through mushroom fermentation technology, MycoTechnology’s flagship product, ClearTaste®, is the world’s first organic bitter blocker, which helps companies reduce the sugar content of their products by blocking bitterness. Additional testing has revealed that ClearTaste® is also able to block the metallic aftertaste associated with potassium chloride, a common salt replacer.  Their second product, PureTaste®, is solving how we will feed an exponentially growing population with a sustainable, functional, and nutritional plant-based protein.

“MycoTechnology is driving the growth of a new and disruptive product range, and we are thrilled to co-lead this investment round and fund the next stages of development,” said Alastair Cooper, senior investment director with ADM Capital Cibus Fund.

The flexibility and potential of this technology, particularly in connection with its success in improving the taste profile of stevia, drew the attention of investors in 2015 when MycoTechnology announced the closing of a $9.2 million Series A, which was led by led by S2G Ventures, and including Seventure Partners, and Middleland Capital.

This round was followed a year later by the closing of an oversubscribed $42 million Series B co-led by S2G, Bunge Ventures, and Emerson Collective. Other investors included in the round are Health for Life Capital; Seventure Partners; Middleland Capital; Tao Capital Partners; Kellogg’s venture fund, Eighteen94 Capital; Continental Grain; GreatPoint Ventures; Closed Loop Capital; and Windy City LLC, Ajinomoto Co. In. and Continental Grain Company.

The $30 million raised through this Series C gives MycoTechnology the ability to explore new innovative ways to meet consumer demands through the development of new ingredients. With this capital, the company will expand and accelerate its R&D project execution, and further expand its team for the pursuit of current and future projects.

“We are excited about the strategic and customer validation of this round,” said Sanjeev Krishnan, S2G Ventures. “Myco has proven itself to be a platform and a products company. Investors in this round represent over $100 billion in revenues and market caps. Myco’s platform is proven to solve many of the food industry problems as it tries to feed the changing consumer preferences.”

Looking to the future, MycoTechnology CEO Alan Hahn told Food Navigator that following this round, which brought total funding to the company to more than $80 million, plans for the company include going public through an IPO, tentatively set for 2021.

“I think we have a great story for the public and I think it will be well received,” said Hahn.

~Lynda Kiernan

Lynda Kiernan is Editor with GAI Media and daily contributor to GAI News. If you would like to submit a contribution for consideration, please contact Ms. Kiernan at lkiernan@globalaginvesting.com.

The post MycoTechnology Raises High-Profile $30M Series C appeared first on Global AgInvesting.

GAI News AgInvesting Weekly Question of the Month Wrap-Up – January 2019

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by Lynda Kiernan, editor, GAI Media

 

GAI News has been running a new feature called “Question of the Month”. Below are the expanded results of the first month’s responses, along with commentary from GAI News Editor Lynda Kiernan.

 

Question:

One of the top trending ag and investing topics as we venture into 2019 is the legalization of industrial hemp production in the U.S.  In your opinion, how much of an impact on the ag investment space will this development have?

I must say, the close split in responses to this question really surprised me.

Exactly 36 percent of respondents stated that the legalization of industrial hemp production in the U.S. would have a significant effect on ag investment – opening new channels of investment, new markets, new ancillary investment opportunities, and would offer greater ability to diversify portfolios.

Meanwhile, 44 percent of respondents stated that legalization of industrial hemp production in the U.S. would have somewhat of an effect on ag investment. New investment channels are always a good development, but production volumes will not be enough to translate into big changes for the ag investment space.

The remaining 20 percent of respondents stated that legalization will have only a minor impact on ag investment, stating that investors will likely hold back capital until there is federal legalization of cannabis.

All told, 80 percent of our respondents believe that legalization will have a certain degree of positive effect on ag investment. This positive effect is already being seen played out in New York State.

Following the passage of the 2018 Farm Bill allowing for the commercial production of hemp, Canadian marijuana company Canopy Growth announced its plans to invest up to $150 million to establish its first production facility in the U.S.

The Hemp Industrial Park project will include large-scale production capabilities focused on product manufacturing, and is expected to result in tons of hemp extract produced per year. Once the site is established, Canopy will source its hemp from U.S. farmers and will act as the anchor business at the location. However, third party businesses can join the innovative vertically integrated hemp ecosystem from cropping, to seed, to fiber, and more.

The scale of this project, the political support it has rapidly garnered in New York, and its structure under which additional third-party businesses can join in creating a vertically integrated hub, could be seen as a single reflection of the latent potential in legal U.S. hemp production.

The $150 million project can also be seen as an albatross signaling solid investment ground ahead in the hemp category for all of our positive thinkers out there.  Bravo!

~ Lynda Kiernan

Lynda Kiernan is Editor with GAI Media and daily contributor to GAI News. If you would like to submit a contribution for consideration, please contact Ms. Kiernan at lkiernan@globalaginvesting.com.

The post GAI News AgInvesting Weekly Question of the Month Wrap-Up – January 2019 appeared first on Global AgInvesting.

Tiverton Agriculture Partners with the Nature Conservancy on Record Hybrid-Management Cattle Station Deal

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Aussie agricultural investment company Tiverton Agriculture has partnered with the Nature Conservancy to acquire two cattle stations along the Murrumbidgee River in New South Wales through a record breaking deal.

The Juanbung and Boyong cattle stations, which total 33,000 hectares of prime grazing land and include the Great Cumbung Swamp wetlands, have been acquired from Melbourne businessman Tim Roberts-Thompson for $55 million. The properties are used for backgrounding for up to 10,000 head of cattle, which then get shipped to nearby feedlots each year.

Led by Nigel Sharp and Harry Youngman, Tiverton Agriculture is a subsidiary of Orana Agriculture, (also founded by Nigel Sharp and Harry Youngman along with partner Andrew Hanson in 2016), which acquired Sunland Fresh Fruit, one of the largest privately-owned fruit growing operations in Australia, for A$20 million (US$14.2 million). All told, Sunland included 363 hectares of orchards, production facilities, and shedding assets spread across seven properties, growing peaches, nectarines, plums, apricots, persimmons, pears, and apples which are predominantly sold on the Australian market, with a smaller portion being exported to China.

As an investment firm with an environmental focus, once the deal is closed, Tiverton plans to have the properties center around sustainable agriculture and conservancy.

“It will be a grazing operation, while caring for the native vegetation,” said Sharp.

The $55 million deal, which is aiming to prove that agriculture and conservation can co-exist, will act to protect the Great Cumbung Swamp, and is being recognized as the highest value private land purchase to include a conservation goal in New South Wales.

“One of the reasons that we’ve made this purchase is because more needs to be done,” said Rich Gilmore, regional director of the Nature Conservancy. Government can’t do everything and so we really think the private sector has a role to play.”

The Great Cumbung will be managed in connection with the 87,000-hectare Gayini Nimmie-Caira property which was acquired by the New South Wales government in 2012, and is currently being managed by the Nature Conservancy and the Nari Nari Tribal Council. And it is hoped that this hybrid deal involving both for-profit sustainable agriculture and environmental conservation can the potential of a hybrid management model.

“It’s a great way of demonstrating across the Murray-Darling Basin that agriculture and nature don’t always have to be in conflict,” said Gilmore.

-Lynda Kiernan  

Lynda Kiernan is Editor with GAI Media and daily contributor to GAI News. If you would like to submit a contribution for consideration, please contact Ms. Kiernan at lkiernan@globalaginvesting.com.

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Chicago Startup Raises $33M to Bring Protein from the Volcano to Your Plate

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Food tech startup Sustainable Bioproducts has closed a $33 million Series A from a selection of some of the top venture capital funds, and two of the largest food and agribusiness companies in the world.

Leading the round was 1955 Capital, the Silicon Valley-based venture capital fund founded by Andrew Chung. Also participating in the round were ADM Ventures, the venture unit of commodity giant, Archer Daniels Midland (ADM); Danone Manifesto Ventures, the venture unit of French food, beverage, and yogurt giant Danone; Lauder Partners; the Liebelson family office; and Breakthrough Energy Ventures – Bill Gates’ $1 billion fund, who’s backers include Jeff Bezos, Richard Branson, and Michael Bloomberg.

Born as a research project under NASA, and based out of the Polsky Center for Entrepreneurship and Innovation at the University of Chicago, Sustainable Bioproducts’ CEO Thomas Jonas states that the original aim was to study extremophile organisms – microbes that can live and thrive under extreme conditions.

This work led the team to study microbes living in the volcanic springs at Yellowstone National Park, and to the development of an innovative fermentation technology that enable the production of protein in a laboratory without negative environmental effects.

“Curiosity and a passion for exploration led us to Yellowstone, one of the harshest ecosystems in the world,” said Thomas Jonas, co-founder and CEO, Sustainable Bioproducts. “By observing how life optimizes the use of resources in this challenging environment, we have invented a way to make protein that is radically more efficient and gentler on our planet.”

Through the company’s process, high-protein extremophile microbes are fed starches or glycerin, which then rapidly multiply. The final product, which contains the nine essential amino acids considered key to the human diet, and which is hoped could one day replace animal-based proteins, can be formulated to be a solid, powder, or liquid, and can be either savory or sweet.

Clean Streak

The deepening of the connection between consumers and their food supply chains, along with a rising popularity of veganism, concerns over animal rights, and awareness around the hormones, antibiotic usage, and unsustainability inherent in the global livestock industry, have pushed many people to look toward alternative ways to get protein into their diet.

Meat production uses one third of the world’s fresh water and land surface, while also generating one fifth of all greenhouses gas emission. And as evidence mounts that the global animal protein production system is not sustainable, plant-based dairy and meat analog and lab-grown meat producers are both increasingly coming into the crosshairs of mission-driven and forward thinking investors.

Bill Gates is also a backer of Memphis Meats, which is working to produce clean beef, chicken, and duck meat in a laboratory setting.

Wild Type in April of last year, raised $3.5 million in funding through a round led by Spark Capital, with participation from Root Ventures, Mission Bay Capital, and a group of angel investors, to back the development of a tool to multiply animal cells to create “clean meat”.

In January of last year, Israel-based biotech startup SuperMeat raised a Seed round of $3 million backed by U.S.-based venture capital fund New Crop Capital, mission-focused venture capital firm Stray Dog Capital, and European poultry producer PHW.

This was followed in August by BluNalu, a newly launched cellular aquaculture startup, announced it has successfully raised $4.5 million in initial funding, and in October, Dutch cell-based meat startup Meatable announced it had closed on $3.5 million in funding led by BlueYard Capital, to advance its work to reprogram Hematopoietic stem cells (HSCs) to become pluripotent stem cells (iPS cells), also called “master cells”, that have the ability to differentiate into muscle cells or fat cells indefinitely.

Demand for such technology is growing across all markets, however, Andrew Chung, managing director of 1955 Capital, noted that it will be from emerging markets where demand will be strongest.

“We have witnessed incredible growth in the demand for new proteins in recent years and believe Sustainable Bioproducts has the most compelling and efficient solution to satisfy this demand,” said Chung. “This demand will not only come from the West, but from the developing world where the need for protein will become more severe.”

~ Lynda Kiernan  

Lynda Kiernan is Editor with GAI Media and daily contributor to GAI News. If you would like to submit a contribution for consideration, please contact Ms. Kiernan at lkiernan@globalaginvesting.com.

The post Chicago Startup Raises $33M to Bring Protein from the Volcano to Your Plate appeared first on Global AgInvesting.

Equilibrium Expands Controlled Environment Foods Portfolio, Partners with Houweling’s Group

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Equilibrium Capital Group, an asset manager focused on sustainable and impact-driven agricultural investments, announced a partnership via equity investment in Houweling’s Group, an advanced greenhouse grower of tomatoes, bell peppers, and cucumbers. Together, Equilibrium and Houweling’s will modernize and expand Houweling’s advanced technology greenhouse facilities located in California and Utah.

“We see a tremendous opportunity for the future of controlled environment foods,” said Equilibrium Chairman David Chen, who will be delivering a presentation on Institutional Scale Controlled Environment Agriculture at Global AgInvesting 2019 in New York this coming April.  

“Houweling’s,” Chen continued, “is a leader and pioneer in North American greenhouse agriculture. Their reputation and record for high quality and consistent crops along with their commitment to sustainability practices has earned them the respect of and growth from leading national retailers.”

Building upon the firm’s decade of work in agriculture and food production, Equilibrium is able to leverage the insights its gained through the management of its assets and the creation of markets with its farmers and food partners. As such, this is the second major move by Equilibrium in controlled-environment food production in a matter of months.

“Farming is undergoing a profound shift to a capital and production infrastructure intensive model to meet the demands of consumers, retailers and food processors for more reliable, year-round, fresher, and sustainable foods,” said Chen. “By partnering with top tier operators such as Houweling’s, we will grow with the demand for year-round greenhouse and regionally grown foods.”

The investment in Houweling’s follows closely upon Equilibrium’s $11.3 million investment in the Minnesota-based greenhouse operations of Revol Greens in December 2018.

Growing a range of leafy greens in protected greenhouse environments, including baby arugula, baby spinach, red and green leaf lettuces, romaine, and butter leaf lettuce on a year-round basis, Revol Greens has seen demand in the U.S. Midwest outpace its production.

“The heightened awareness around food safety has only increased the appetite for greenhouse grown produce,” said Jay Johnson, president of Revol Greens. “We look forward to expanding our greenhouse operations so that we can serve the growing number of consumers seeking out fresh, great-tasting lettuce that is safe to eat.”

As a market leader with an advanced agriculture infrastructure platform that focuses on opportunities in regeneratively grown permanent crops, controlled-environment foods, and waste-water-energy distributed infrastructure, the partnership with Houweling’s strikes multiple fits with Equilbrium’s investment strategy.

Not only is the company an industry-leading grower, propagator, and marketer of greenhouse vegetables with more than 200 acres of greenhouse farms, but is also a pioneer in sustainability and waste-heat management.

“[Houweling’s] state-of-the-art greenhouse in Utah captures waste heat and CO2 from the neighboring power plant, reducing the amount of fossil fuels consumed compared to a traditional greenhouse operation, and recycling CO2 that would otherwise enter the atmosphere,” said Chen. “This is exactly the kind of economic and sustainability impact we look for in our strategies.”

Combined, the investments being made by Equilibrium in these large-scale greenhouse operations across California, Utah, and Minnesota exceed $100 million, according to Impact Alpha, and will support Houweling’s and Revol in doubling the size of their operations over the coming two years.

Equilibrium is also one of the largest investors in hydroponic berry production in North America; holding significant operating assets which have been marked to be expanded to more than 350 acres over the next 24 months as well.

“Our food system is moving towards controlled environment and distributed infrastructure as a means to adapt to the stress of climate change on current land-rooted systems, and the need to optimize our available land, water, and labor resources,” noted Chen. “Beyond vegetables and fruits, we will see this trend continuing to other areas of food production, including aquaculture and alternative proteins.”

-Lynda Kiernan 

Lynda Kiernan is Editor with GAI Media and daily contributor to GAI News. If you would like to submit a contribution for consideration, please contact Ms. Kiernan at lkiernan@globalaginvesting.com.

The post Equilibrium Expands Controlled Environment Foods Portfolio, Partners with Houweling’s Group appeared first on Global AgInvesting.

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