1 / 31

Alpaca Food Supply Chain Field Study

Field Study

Download Presentation

Alpaca Food Supply Chain Field Study

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Field Study: Food Supply Chain Tech By Aubrie Pagano

  2. What is Food Supply Chain Tech? Food Supply Chain Tech is service, information and infrastructure technology that is used to allocate food resources in a safe, efficient, reliable and sustainable manner. Why Food Supply Chain? 1. The food supply chain facilitates the distribution of $1.77 trillion worth of food in US. (usda.gov 2019) 2. In the US, median deal size in Food Tech increased by 50% from $2M in 2019 to $3M in 2020. Total capital raised increased from $9.3M in 2018 to $13.4M in 2019. 3. Food Supply Chain (total 389 companies): 42 deals in 2018 and 33 deals in 2019 with over $3B capital raised in each year. Significantly more than capital investments in 2017. 4. Supply chain (total 6334 companies): $15B total capital raised in 2019, 23% increase compared to 2018, and 300% increased compared to 2017. 2020 median deal size increased by 39% from 2019.

  3. Food Supply Chain is an enormous market. Opportunity Opportunity • Global food system accounts for 10% of the world’s GDP and employs as many as 1.5 billion people. Global food logistics market reached a value of $100B (2018), projected to reach around $162B by 2024 (CAGR over 8%). Trading margins of agriculture commodities dropped from 15% in 1998 to 9% in 2018.1Lower returns command the ability • • to be cost competitive—which today is largely achieved through technology adoption. Less than one-quarter of executives feel that they’ve made significant progress in developing a playbook for the future. • What’s ahead? What’s ahead? Changing consumer preferences will continue to boost organic and healthier food markets. • Food safety regulation will lead to product/menu expansion, higher standards, and a more intense focus on traceability. • Increased appetite for convenience will catalyze innovation in packaging, and operational challenges and cost • pressures (including rising labor costs) among equipment users are set to accelerate automation. COVID changed 85% of consumer’s food habits. The lasting effect of the pandemic, as well as a potential economic • downturn, urge food supply chain actors to pursue robust and resilient strategies. Source: McKinsey Corporate Performance Analytics; Bayer “Feeding the World in a Pandemic”

  4. The Food Value Chain The number of actors in the food chain varies greatly at each level. In the US, around 2 million farms produce agricultural products for processing via about 36,000 plants in the food and beverage industry. The food processors sell their products through approximately 16,500 companies within the food distribution industry. In 2019, $1.77 trillion was spent on total food expenditures by consumers, businesses and government entities. (USDA) Actors Actors Producers Producers Processors Processors Distributors Distributors Consumers Consumers Gov/Regulators Gov/Regulators Farming, ranching, research and development Butchering, processing & manufacturing, marketing and sales Distributing and retailing Shopping and consuming Public health and safety, policy Key Key Responsibilities Responsibilities Challenges Challenges Market strategy and implementation, regulatory compliance, access to capital Supply chain strategy, achieving economy of scale Food safety and traceability, supply chain management Food availability and safety, health and wellness, quality and sustainability Food availability and safety, health and wellness, quality and sustainability

  5. Industry Wide Challenges Challenge Challenge Food Safety and Fraud Food Safety and Fraud Facts Facts CDC estimates about one in six American becomes ill and 3,000 die from foodborne diseases each year. • Food recalls increased by 54% to 28 million pounds annually on average during 2015-2019 compared to 2010-2014. • Direct cost to a food company due to a recall is estimated to be $10 million; indirect costs including subsequent litigation, compliance penalties and damaged reputation can be even greater. • Food fraud refers to the international deception using food for economic gain. It costs the global food industry $30-40 billion per year. • Global population growth means that food production needs to increase by 70% by 2050. • Northern America is the most urbanized region with 82% of its population living in urban areas. Urbanization is associated with more demands for convenient and “luxury” foods, this implies our dietary shift towards more energy-intensive production and pre-prepared food. • Rapid rise in number, size, and diversity of megacities make the food supply chain increasingly complex to manage and move food from farm to table. • One third of globally produced food is wasted. In the US, food waste is estimated at between 30-40% of the food supply. • Food waste is responsible for 6% of global greenhouse gas emissions. Production of lost or wasted food generates the equivalent of 37 million cars' worth of greenhouse gas emissions in the U.S. • Rapid Population Growth Rapid Population Growth and Urbanization and Urbanization Food Waste Food Waste Inflexible Distribution Inflexible Distribution System System Just about 50 factories process 98% of the nation’s beef. “Big Four” processors: Tyson Foods, JBS, Cargill, and National Beef, accounted for 80% of beef market and are currently under antitrust investigation. Heavily consolidated system results in bottleneck under the stress of COVID, with 18 processing plants in the US closed in April 2020, affecting more than a third of the country’s beef and pork supply. • • Changing Consumer Changing Consumer Behaviors due to COVID Behaviors due to COVID Consumers, forgoing public venues and eating at home, stocked up on groceries and supplies. Boosting food sales by 29% in April 2020 over the prior year. However, sales declined at restaurants by 27%. E-commerce channel represents 10-15% of total grocery spend, increasing fivefold in April 2020. This created challenges associated with last-minute delivery. Walmart, for example, has hired 50,000 additional people, and Instacart has hired 300,000, as they navigate new COVID-19-related safety precautions. Forecasts are uncertain about the duration of pandemic-related demand shifts and the recovery of the food-service economy. • • •

  6. Technology trends driving the industry forward. Digital Digital Marketplaces Marketplaces & & E E- -commerce commerce Automation & Automation & Robotics Robotics AI/ML Analytics SaaS AI/ML Analytics SaaS Food Traceability Food Traceability Systems Systems Food Repurpose Food Repurpose Reduce labor costs, improve ecommerce delivery times, and alleviate labor constraints. COVID accelerated automation technology to assist human worker, make warehouses safer, and ensure continuity of operations. Enhance supply chain efficiency and operational optimization through data collection along chain, which provides valuable insights and facilitates data driven-decision making. Change food wholesaling and retailing experiences for stakeholders. Trace the flow of foods throughout production, processing and distribution stages. Help food companies and governments more efficiently identify, isolate respond to the source of a food safety issue and food fraud concerns. Add value to byproducts or surplus ingredients through additional processing Reduce food waste and support a more sustainable food system. Realize a shorter time to market and meet buyer demands while reducing food waste. Sample: Sample: • Sales and Operation planning • Waste Prevention • Logistic Management Sample: Sample: • Warehouse automation • Autonomous delivery robots Sample: Sample: • B2B platform • B2C platform • Excess redistribution Sample: Sample: • Real-time monitoring IoT • Blockchain-enabled ledger • Food sensing tech Sample: Sample: • Upcycled food products • Novel edible by- product Mature Less Mature

  7. Investible traits of key technologies for Alpaca VC: Asset light Asset light • Low upfront investment in hardware or physical assets High Adaptability High Adaptability • User friendly UI and UX for broad user (non-technical) adoption • Retrofit solution or minimal upfront change • Easy and seamless integration with other systems Fast Growth Fast Growth • Short time to market • Prepared for rapid scaling in growth stage; scalability Less Regulated Less Regulated • Focusing on market that has low regulatory barriers Agility Agility • React immediately to market changes • Constant adjustment to optimize product market fit We narrowed away from Robotics and Food Traceability as result

  8. VC Investment Deal Count Supply Chain Tech Food Tech 350 350 300 300 250 250 Deal Count Deal Count 200 200 150 150 100 100 50 50 0 0 2016 2017 2018 2019 2016 2017 2018 2019 Source: Pitchbook Data

  9. Capital Raised Supply Chain Tech Food Tech $16 $16 Billions Billions $14 $14 $12 $12 $10 Capital Raised $10 Capital Raised $8 $8 $6 $6 $4 $4 $2 $2 $0 $0 2016 2017 2018 2019 2016 2017 2018 2019 Source: Pitchbook Data

  10. Capital Raised from VC Investments (Food Supply Chain) 46 187 Deals 726 $5.60B Largest Deal Companies Investors Investments Over Time $12 Billions $10 $8 Capital Raised $6 $4 $2 $0 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019 Source: Pitchbook Data

  11. VC Deals in 2019 & 2020 Top deals focusing on mature technology trends Start Start- -up up Top Funding Top Funding ($M) ($M) 2935 Latest Round Latest Round Innovation Trend Innovation Trend Challenge Challenge Addressed Addressed Urbanization Company Company Description Description Food delivery application Grocery delivery application Subscription meal delivery service Automated logistics fulfillment solution Farm-to-table food delivery Wholesale B2B food supplier Warehousing space on-demand Doordash Series H Marketplace, Last mile delivery Marketplace, Last mile delivery Meal Delivery Service Robotic, micro fulfillment Marketplace, SaaS Instacart 2270 Series G Urbanization Sun Basket 140 Series E Distribution, food waste Distribution Fabric 136 Series B GrubMarket 106 Series C Distribution Cheetah 72 Series B Marketplace B2B distribution Flexe 64 Series B Marketplace Distribution, Warehouse

  12. VC Deals in 2019 & 2020 Top deals focusing on emerging technology trends Start Start- -up up Top Funding Top Funding ($M) ($M) 30 Latest Round Latest Round Innovation Trend Innovation Trend Challenge Challenge Addressed Addressed Food safety Company Company Description Description Supply chain transparency software Demand forecasting platform for the food industry AI platform for fresh supply chain management Quality assessment of food commodity Farm to kitchen technology solution Food tracing platform Zero waste snack Foodlogiq 2nd Round SaaS, Blockchain Crisp 26 Series A Data Analytics Productivity, food waste Afresh 20 Series A Data Analytics – AI Productivity, food waste Intello Labs 9 Series A Data Analytics – AI/ML Data Analytics – ML Food safety, food waste Food waste Codify 5 Early State VC Connecting Food 5 Early State VC Food traceability – Blockchain Upcycle Food safety ReGrained 4.5 Early State VC Food waste

  13. M&A Overview Investments Over Time M&A activities in the Food Tech vertical have 40 dramatically increased over the past 3 years in terms of deal count, with a median deal size of $107M in 2019. 35 30 Top M&A Activities 2019 Top M&A Activities 2019- -2020 2020 25 Deal Count 20 • Just Eat Takeaway acquired GrubHub for $7.3B • Uber acquired Postmates for $2.65B 15 • Uber acquired Cornershop for $459M 10 • Target acquired Deliv as the retailer ramps up its same-day delivery capabilities. 5 • Workday acquired Scout for $540M 0 2014 2015 2016 Corp/Strategic M&A 2017 2018 2019 Source: Pitchbook Data

  14. Food Digital Marketplaces + E-commerce

  15. What is a Food Digital Marketplace & E-commerce? Digital Marketplace and E-commerce solutions are online platforms designed to sell a selection of products. They can either offer a broad range of products or specialized type of products that connect B2B or B2C. Other core characteristics of food marketplaces include facilitating direct transactions among multiple sellers and buyers; often, sellers pay commission fees to gain access to a specific consumer base. Continued development of tech enablement such as payments and security, as well as a shift in consumer behavior, have fueled the growth of startups in this ecosystem. Food and beverage, still the least-penetrated category online, is expected to grow 58.5% in online sales in 2020. Restaurant Restaurant Delivery Delivery E E- -grocery grocery Wholesale Wholesale Platforms Platforms E E- -Procurement Procurement & Supporting & Supporting Solutions Solutions Meal Kits Meal Kits Virtual Virtual Farmer’s Farmer’s Markets Markets Surplus & “Ugly” Surplus & “Ugly” Product Product Marketplaces Marketplaces Description On-demand platforms connecting restaurants and customers. Aggregating restaurants, brands, and data in-app and providing delivery services to the customers. In U.S. online food delivery penetration could rise from 6% (~$19bn) in 2018 to 13% (~$60bn) in 2025. (Morgan Stanley) Online grocers provides e- commerce services for grocery items to consumers. The U.S. online grocery market was estimated to generate sales worth of about $28.68B in 2019, with sales forecast to reach $59.5B by 2023. (Statista) Wholesaling platforms eliminate legacy intermediary players in the supply chain, streamlining payments and invoicing processes and helping restaurants source from a vetted network of producers to ensure ingredient quality and competitive prices. These enterprise softwares are designed for food industry suppliers and vendors. They provide innovative solutions to meet the demand of users as food supply chain shifts to online and players participate in the digital marketplace. Meal kit subscription models provides consumers with pre-made meals or portioned ingredients paired with recipes. By 2022, this market is expected to reach 11.6 billion dollars. (Statista) Websites or apps let users order fresh produce online from local farmers and artisanal food producers. Marketplaces for ugly and surplus produce. Bridging the gap by connecting “imperfect” products to buyers who don’t need the aesthetics. Discounted pricing is often offered, and they help solve the massive food waste problem . In the US 10.1 million tons of food are left unused on farms and in packing facilities each year. Imperfect Foods, Full Harvest Examples Doordash, Uber Eats, Grubhub Thrive Market, Peapod, Instacart, Jupiter Choco, Cheetah, Pod Foods, Pepper, Dine Market Uppler, Gwholesaler, Mercatus Blue Apron, Hello Fresh, Hungryroot, Freshly Good Eggs, OurHarvest

  16. Three areas that interest us most 1. Wholesale 1. Wholesale Platforms Platforms 2. E 2. E- -Procurement, Supporting Solution Procurement, Supporting Solution 3. Surplus Redistribution 3. Surplus Redistribution Why: Why: • Why: Why: • Why: Why: • Offline to Online evolution, growth in adjacent industries (ie., Apparel) The need and demand from incumbent companies to adapt and cope with the digital ecosystem Competing for time and lack of internal capacity and talent 40% of the food wasted by weight occurs at consumer-facing businesses (e.g., restaurants, grocery and supermarket stores) The food industry spends $1.3 billion a year to dispose of unsold food Tech and data enable matching and price adjustments to help solve the food waste problem Centralized, stagnant and antiquated wholesaling and distribution systems B2B platforms reduce operation cost, markups and hidden fees, and pass on the costs to end consumers Industry is ripe to be disrupted and repeat the B2C playbook • • • • • • Value Add: Value Add: • Convenience and reliability of the ordering, invoicing and fulfilment process • Recommendation algorithm based on demand and market data • vertical integration from farm to table, B2B2C marketplaces, ability to pass on cost saving to users Value Add: Value Add: • Accelerate and complement the digital supply chain revolution • Improve operational efficiency under time constraints • Solutions include: B2B marketplace development solutions, Enterprise software platforms-- financial, inventory management, CRM Value Add: Value Add: • Real-time information about available food • Food quality control and assurance, customization at scale, end-of-life product management • Ability to deploy route planning and recurring order fulfillment to minimize last mile delivery costs and time

  17. Food Digital Marketplace Startup Examples Value Prop Value Prop Business Model Business Model Capital Raised to date Capital Raised to date Pod Foods Online B2B ordering platform for retailers and brands, providing real-time analytics, data solution, inventory and fulfillment management. Sales volume based commission fee. Two-tier fee structure: full-service distribution or direct ordering solution, ranging from 8%-25%. $7.27M Uppler B2B marketplace software solution provider, offering all-in-one solution, creating private and custom marketplaces and e-procurement platforms. Wholesale groceries and restaurant supplies marketplace offers businesses an affordable solution for the procurement of their daily supplies. It expanded into direct-to-consumer during COVID. Developer of multi-channel B2B ecommerce platform (food and beverage is one of its focus areas) for wholesalers and B2B sales reps to facilitate order management, product and pricing updates, and other customization features. Online food market, sourcing ”ugly” and surplus food from farmers and selling at discounted price directly to customers, hence reducing food waste by matching supply and demand. SaaS model with fixed monthly fee. Privately Held (no-backing) Cheetah Facilitate the transaction between merchants and buyers. Service fee is charged based on the order placed by restaurant (buyer). $72.72M Handshake SaaS model. Handshake Rep pricing starting from $39.95. Customized pricing for Handshake Direct (B2B optimized web storefront/buyer app). $23.5M, acquired by Shopify in 2019 (under $100M) Imperfect Foods Subscription model. Weekly grocery staples and pantry items delivery to the door, box pricing starts from $16-$24. $145.2M

  18. Food Digital Marketplaces: Key Drivers and Challenges Drivers Drivers • Consolidated distribution system is ripe for disruption: With physical plants and store closures, COVID highlights the vulnerability. • Evolving consumer need: Increasing importance placed on convenience, quality and personalized shopping experience. • Readily available infrastructure and technology: On-demand delivery. online payment capabilities, and e-commerce solutions. • Ecosystem maturity: Popularity of E-commerce and direct to consumer brands in retail. • Profitability and Logistics: Lower overhead cost, supply chain efficiency and wider reach. • Food and Beverage e-commerce sales is the fastest-growing and least penetrated e-commerce category. Challenges Challenges Last mile delivery is burdensome to supply chains, as consumer behaviors change and there is increased appetite for on-demand • delivery; additionally, food and cold chain delivery becomes the biggest cost driver in the supply chain. Customer loyalty and repeat purchases: B2C marketplaces usually have low switching costs to users and hence low customer loyalty. • Balance between unit economics and growth: High customer acquisition and retention costs, while at the same time multi-sided • platforms rely on economies of scale to reap the full benefit and generate operation efficiency. Disintermediation: Due to the revenue model, which heavily reply on commission/referral fee of GMV traded via digital marketplace, • buyers and sellers are likely to find ways to circumvent the marketplace.

  19. Food Digital Marketplaces: Differentiators Effective Data Effective Data • Ability to abstract data and protect business sensitive information • Efficient usage of platform level data (e.g., purchase history, user behavior) with a customized recommendation engine • Tools and analytics to inform user decisions Competitive Pricing Competitive Pricing • Offer tiered pricing or dynamic discount by customer segmentation based on volume or number of transactions • Pass savings to the customers through scale, and streamline + standardize processes along the supply chain Product Selection Product Selection • Reach the depth and desired product assortment for the target market • Clear positioning, customer segmentation and cultivation of new supply based on buyer needs Fulfilment and Delivery Fulfilment and Delivery Methods • Identify methods that meet customer requirements (speed, convenience and price) and that are the most operationally efficient • Actively invest in long-term solutions to address the largest costs in logistics Methods Platform Platform- -Specific Features Specific Features • Meet compliance requirements -- in food trade, sellers are legally bound to display certain features of the product origin, conservation methods, traceability and freshness • Identify unique value-add features to improve user capabilities, retention, and user adoption (e.g., B2B marketplace sellers should be able to select buyers in order to maintain positioning and exclusive distribution) • APIs and SDKs to allow more integrations and give users permission to create value for themselves. Source: HBS, The Best Platforms Are More than Matchmakers

  20. AI/ML Analytics SaaS

  21. What is big data SaaS in Food Supply Chain? The application of IoT and advanced robotics to create networks in the food supply chain management, thus enabling analytics to automate decision making and significantly improve performance and customer satisfaction. In the past 30 years, logistics moved from a purely operational function to advanced planning processes and operations between customers and producers. Using predictive and prescriptive analytics solutions to improve areas such as supply chain transparency, demand planning, pricing and end-of-life product management could bring social, economic and environmental benefits. Inventory Planning/ Inventory Planning/ Demand Forecasting Demand Forecasting Waste Prevention Waste Prevention Shipping logistics Shipping logistics management management Description Inventory stock in food industry is often perishable with heavy regulations to keep accountability checked and consumers safe. Inventory management systems can generate real-time insights on product demand and pricing, balancing stock more efficiently and reducing waste. Big data and AI solutions are used to optimize ordering, forecasting and operations. Afresh, Shelf Engine, Spoiler Alert Using IoT and AI to improve data accuracy and identify food waste. Sensor based technologies enable sorting and grading systems to help food businesses to maximize yields by replacing damaged products with new ones or performing preventive measures. Uses sensors, processing and data analysis to monitor product statuses and environmental conditions, in order to optimize transportation for faster delivery and effective reaction time to supply chain issues. Examples Winnow, Tomra, GeniCan Wise Systems, Routific, Descartes

  22. AI/ML Analytics SaaS: Key Drivers and Challenges Drivers Drivers • Complexity of food industry: Regulations and a demand for high quality product just-in-time. • IoT & Cloud: Data collection and management costs are lower. • Data availability: With more online business systems and more consumer data provided through social networking, more data points are available for analysis. • Proven success: Advanced data science techniques and SaaS adoption continued to be applied across industries, which creates the ability to achieve operational efficiency and streamline management processes. • Future of Work: Dashboard accessible from different devices and users. Challenges Challenges Scale infrastructure to accommodate the large volumes of data to be analyzed. • Complex data collection and application integration. • Opaque ecosystem that results in data silos; big data will not be realized until information is shared and analyzed • throughout the supply chain. Privacy concerns. • Hard to measure financial impact and lack of immediate proven results can foster reluctance from incumbent legacy food • supply chain players, hence preventing widespread adoption.

  23. AI/ML Analytics being used in Food Supply Chain Company Company Value Prop Shelf Engine Shelf Engine Shelf Engine is a guaranteed sale vendor for grocery store. Its order forecasting solution uses machine learning and probabilistic models to generate accurate orders. This eliminates inventory loss, minimizes out of stock, and improves bottom lines. Winnow Winnow Winnow reduces food waste in the hospitality industry through its object recognition AI technology. By putting a pulse on food that was thrown away, Winnow makes it easy to calculate the monetary value of the food wasted and cut food costs. Winnow leverages AI technology to measure waste in commercial kitchens. Food waste is thrown away and captured by cameras. After a short period of initial training of the model tailored to the specific food business, Winnow can recognize and record the weight of the food, enable data analytical tools to highlight volume, help users to make better decisions, and eliminate manual data entry. Routific Routific Routific is a route optimization software platform that helps delivery businesses plan their routes more efficiently, saving them time and delivery cost. Description The automated prediction engine recommends what to order everyday for the specific user, based on analyzing historical POS data and machine learning based dependent models. Routific created an algorithm inspired by the way that bees share the best routes to their food sources with other bees. Routes are planned automatically based on the proprietary algorithm which has been in development for more than a decade and takes into consideration many real-world factors. The pricing strategy is a markup model ranging from 5%-25%, depending on the shelf life, gross margin and other aspects related to the category and SKU. Routific offers a monthly subscription model from $39/ vehicle and is used by companies like DoorDash; Routific can save up to 40% on driving time and fuel. Shelf Engine generates weekly report to show savings and increases in gross profit in a simple way. It has also established relationships with hundreds of vendors and distributors and continues to develop new ones to include grocer’s existing suppliers. Winnow adopts a SaaS model and is used by companes such as IKEA; Helps reduce food waste by 50% and food costs by 2-8%.

  24. What qualities do we look for in AI/ML Analytics companies? Qualified Team Qualified Team • Ability to recognize the pain points and relevant regulatory requirements of the food supply chain. • Focusing on solving high-value use cases for a specific stage of players in the value chain. • Clear understanding of the risk of AI-powered solutions and the accompanying level of accuracy. • Ability to explain the value of their unique algorithm. • Qualification and deep domain knowledge • Applied AI talent pool Data Collection + Integrity Data Collection + Integrity • Data Collection: Data is readily available through system integrations or easy to access via cost- efficient sensors and devices. • Quality Assurance: Data is well structured, labeled in high quality manner and ready to be analyzed. Quality assessments are performed on a timely basis. • Data acquisition strategy to overcome cold start problem. • Domain-specific, proprietary dataset is a significant source of competitive advantage. Model Accuracy Model Accuracy • Correctness. Accuracy of the model results using real world data • Speed. Time to train the initial model and flexibility to run PoC/pilot projects

  25. Food Repurpose

  26. What is Food Repurpose? Food Repurpose use ingredients that otherwise would have not gone to human consumption, are procured and produced using verifiable supply chains, and have a positive impact on the environment. About 30-40% of all food produced in the United States, worth an estimated $218 billion (1.3% of GDP), is wasted. Food repurpose addresses the food waste problem directly and is one way to solve the food urgency problem as the population grows. Upcycled food makes a more sustainable and resilient food system for all players along the supply chain and can help reduce 70B tons of greenhouse gases from food loss and waste while creating economic opportunity and jobs for people around the world . Upcycled Food and Ingredients Upcycled Food and Ingredients Process Process- -Focused Tech Solution Focused Tech Solution Description Upcycled food brands focusing on processing and production of food products which are novel in nature or from novel sources for human consumption. In order to extract value, the byproduct is dehydrated, then extracted, followed by alcohol precipitation to clarify target compounds, before being further processed to obtain a stable product. The byproduct then goes through further product development and processing to be formulated into finished ingredients and food items. Barnana, Ambrosia, WISErg, Regrained, Renewal Rise Products Proprietary processes and technologies to increase efficiencies in the dehydration or extraction process, or to maintain the nutritional and aesthetic qualities of byproducts throughout processing. These technologies can be used for their own purpose or licensed to food manufacturers. Example Treasure 8, Planetarians Source: Ellen MacArthur Foundation

  27. It’s an exciting time for the Food Repurpose space. $46 B Market $46 B Market 27x economic value 27x economic value increase increase Ethical Values of Ethical Values of Consumers Consumers Food Food- -focused focused accelerators accelerators Food waste is a booming business worth $46.7 billion in 2019. Ugly produce alone accounts for 40% of the food produced in the U.S. and food waste costs retailers about $18.2 billion a year. It has an expected CAGR of 5% for the next 10 years. Common upcycling byproducts, including BSG, are mostly sold as animal feed today, which loses most of its value. There is ample opportunity to recapture these ingredients and maintain a ”negative COGS” environment. 62% of consumers said they would be at least somewhat comfortable eating "ugly produce.” Consumers nowadays are becoming aware about sustainable means of production and have a high regard towards food sustainably. Accelerators such as FoodBytes! by Rabobank, Techstars Farm to Fork Accelerator, AB InBev’s 100+ Accelerator, and Food-X provide ecosystem for food upcycling startups to gain traction and foster early partnerships with corporations. Source: Future Market Insights using data published by Food Waste Through Economics and Data

  28. Food Repurpose Startup Examples Regrained Regrained Low fat, high fiber snacks made from upcycled byproduct from beer-making. Akua Akua Kelp jerky snacks made from ocean- farmed kelp. Treasure 8 Treasure 8 A novel drying technology used on food waste or food surplus. Value Prop Value Prop Regrained uses one of the most common upcycle products – brewery “spent” grain (BSG) and processes it with its patent- pending process, creating two product lines: Bars and Puffs. It is a hybrid CPG and B2B ingredient company. Through CPG sales to consumers, the company generates awareness and builds demand, hence scaling the B2B ingredients sales and launching co-branded products. Akua use zero-input crop from the ocean to make plant-based snacks. Their products are carried by over 50 retailers throughout the nation and 5 online retailers including Thrive Market. Treasure 8 helps recover and reform food waste through patented process. The dehydration technology treats fresh produce, aspirating water vapor molecules without losing the micro-nutrients in food, extending the shelf-life and capturing the texture. Description Description

  29. Food Repurpose: Key Drivers and Challenges Drivers Drivers • Size & Growth: Upcycled Food Industry is worth $46.7 Billion and has an expected compound annual growth rate of 5% for the next 10 years. • Consumer Acceptance and Willingness to pay premium. • Awareness for food waste problem and greater public demand for more sustainable goods: A study said that more than half of consumers want to buy more upcycled foods. • Greater Clarity and further education: Emerging trade associations and certification programs continue to define upcycling industry and scale the segment. Challenges Challenges Operationally heavy and very product focused. • “Greenwashing” by rebranding products that won’t mitigate the food waste problem and have been around for years. • Space is early in its development stage; most startups focused on food waste are in the pre-venture and seed stages. • High capex investment (i.e., engaging in commercial processing/ manufacturing). • Requires vertical integration, and strategic partnerships with corporations are essential for scaling. •

  30. What qualities do we look for in Food Repurpose companies? Low Capex Low Capex • Technology-driven, first Proprietary Distribution Channels Proprietary Distribution Channels Relationship with distributors and retailers • Asset-light, efficient operations • Clear and achievable distribution strategy • Short time-to-market product timeline • Product D Product Differentiation ifferentiation Strategic Strategic Partnerships Partnerships First mover advantage • B2B contracts with established food • Novel food/ingredients • distributors, and/ or CPG companies Quality assurance and testing • Supplier partnerships • Nutrition value • Sourcing partners • Consumer perception, high NPS, brand equity •

  31. Thank You www.alpaca.vc

More Related