Loading
Asia Agri-Food-Tech Digest: May 2025 Roundup
This month's top stories highlight a powerful blend of innovation, investment, and policy shifts shaping the future of agriculture, food, and climate action in Asia.
Discover Nutrition from Water's (NXW) key takeaways from the Asia-Pacific Agri-Food Innovation Summit
Take a dive into what Nutrition from Water (NXW) has been up to since being a featured start-up at the Asia-Pacific Agri-Food Innovation Summit in 2024. 
Inside BlueTree Technologies’ Breakthrough Moment
Discover how BlueTree Technologies, a featured start-up at the 2024 Asia-Pacific Agri-Food Innovation Summit, is transforming beverages with clean-label sugar reduction and what their journey means for the future of food-tech.
Start-Up Success Story: How Poket’s Smart Data Platform Turned Heads
Start-Up Success Story: How Poket’s Smart Data Platform Turned Heads The Asia-Pacific Agri-Food Innovation Summit is the launchpad for early- to mid-stage innovators looking to transform global food systems. With a curated audience of investors, mult …
Asia Agri-Food-Tech Digest: April 2025 Roundup
From ocean farming investment in New Zealand to functional foods in China, the Asia-Pacific region continues to lead with bold, future-forward agri-food policies and innovations. Here's a monthly snapshot of the most exciting developments transformin …

AgTech Navigator News

  • SporeSense, a UK-based start-up led by Afghan refugee Niaz Rayan, is pioneering an AI-powered spore detection device that could save farmers millions by identifying crop diseases like yellow rust in real time. This technology, developed with support from partners like Sony and BASF and backed by a £2.2 million Innovate UK grant, promises to reduce pesticide use and increase yields, with each device covering up to 100 hectares. SporeSense plans to expand its application to other crops and integrate additional features such as nutrient sensing, aiming to offer farmers comprehensive crop health insights. Rayan's journey from refugee to agtech innovator underscores the success of collaborative partnerships and the potential for technological innovation in agriculture.
  • The Svalbard Global Seed Vault has received its first significant deposit of African opportunity crops, marking a historic moment for the preservation of the continent's vegetable heritage. Over 3,000 seed samples from 109 crop species, essential for nutrition and climate resilience, have been deposited from more than 30 African countries. This effort is part of the African Vegetable Biodiversity Rescue Plan, supported by global institutions, aiming to secure Africa's food security and promote traditional crops. The genebank actively distributes seeds for research and farming, reinforcing the importance of biodiversity and global cooperation in safeguarding food systems.
  • AgZen is helping growers save on crop inputs one drop at a time.
  • What is old is new in farming, as today’s high-tech greenhouses can help bring the grower and the consumer closer together.
  • A Rothamsted Research study published in npj Sustainable Agriculture highlights soil erosion as the primary threat to soil health, driven by over-ploughing, overgrazing, and deforestation. The report warns that without systemic changes in agricultural practices, global food production could face irreversible declines, but suggests that agtech solutions and sustainable practices could restore soil resilience.