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Best of NAMA 2025












GLOBAL AGRIFOODTECH INVESTMENT STABLE WITH 2023, SHOWS SOME SIGN OF IMPROVEMENT
Source: AgFunder Global AgriFoodTech Investment Report 2025


by Jennifer Marston, AgFunder News

We'd all be forgiven for assuming the next batch of agrifoodtech investment data would be dismal. After all, the sector has been in freefall for the last few years, pulled down by macroeconomic trends and venture capital investor disenchantment, not to mention a pullback across venture capital more broadly.

All of that still exists, and it's now compounded by geopolitical tensions, tariff wars, and the ever-present threat of climate change. But at least when it comes to agrifoodtech investment, there are some signs of recovery.

Global agrifoodtech investment reached $16 billion in 2024, according to a new report from AgFunder. While this is nowhere near the record-breaking $51 billion in 2021, nor even at pre-pandemic levels, it's nonetheless just a 4% drop from 2023.

The numbers suggest a slowing -- though not necessarily a full stop -- to the freefall.

Increased investment in developed markets such as the US and the Netherlands and developing nations such as India hints at better days to come. However, we're not out of the woods yet: some markets were still significantly down, including China, the UK, and Spain.

Downstream ahead in 2024

Upstream categories -- those closest to the farm or lab -- continued to outpace those downstream in 2024, taking 51% of total funding over 1,265 deals. Yet investment upstream declined 22% year-on-year, with the worst-hit areas being Bioenergy & Biomaterials as well as Novel Farming Systems; both posted 50%+ drops in funding compared to 2023.

Meanwhile, downstream categories -- those closest to the consumer -- increased their share of total agrifoodtech funding, with investment increasing 38% year-over-year in 2024. What's more, eGrocery retook the title of top-funded category for the year after losing it to Bioenergy & Biomaterials in 2023. eGrocery accounted for almost 12% of all agrifoodtech investment in 2024, and a 17% increase year-over-year.

Counterintuitively, the biggest decline in the number of deals closed came in the downstream sectors, where just 497 deals closed, a 37% year-over-year decrease. However, 14% YoY increase in the median deal size downstream helped push totals up.

Upstream startups closed 1,265 deals, a more muted 16% drop compared to 2023 deal activity.

U.S. leads global funding, India leads developing markets

The U.S. once again topped the list for global agrifoodtech investment, with startups there garnering almost half ($6.6 billion) of all capital raised in 2024, a 14% increase on 2023.

Other countries posting increases included India (+215%), the Netherlands (+118%), Finland (+403%), and Japan (+76%).

India, home to nearly 18% of the world's population, rose from fourth to second place in 2024, reeling in $2.5 billion. The figure is on par with pre-pandemic levels, though much of it was due to a few sizeable late-stage deals from food delivery and eGrocery startups.

India also garnered the majority of funding for developing markets, which are defined in the report (with the exception of China and South Korea) as those part of the United Nations' intergovernmental organization G77.

To read the entire report click here.

To receive the entire 77-page report click here.


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