This past year, the world wasted 1.6B tons of food, resulting in a loss of $1.2T. Research by the Boston Consulting Group predicts that the amount of food waste will rise to 2.1B tons (and $1.5T) by 2030.
According to the research, there’s a $700B opportunity in the food supply chain due to 4 main problems: Crappy infrastructure, low efficiency, lack of incentive, and poor collaboration. But in the past month, several startups have raised money to address each of these issues:
Apeel Sciences, which makes a plant-based second skin that keeps produce fresh 3x as long, raised a $70m Series C.
Karma, which provides chefs and grocers with a marketplace to sell unsold food at a discount, raised a $12m Series A.
Imperfect Produce, which delivers unsellable but tasty ‘ugly’ veggies to consumers, is in the middle of a fundraising round authorized up to $30m.
Full Harvest, which provides a B2B marketplace that links excess farm produce with businesses like juicers, raised an $8.5m Series A.
If all goes well, these startups could reduce greenhouse gas emissions associated with food waste and help feed the 870m undernourished people across the planet all while making their investors happy.