New UK agri-tech strategy and government support needed to maintain momentum

The organisation’s ‘Back to the Future’ report, marking 10 years of the not-for-profit membership organisation, provides a 360-degree overview of what is needed to maintain the momentum from the 2013 AgriTech Strategy. It reflects on both the successes and current challenges agri-tech faces.

A refreshed government agri-tech strategy that helps unlock the potential of agriculture and horticulture to deliver multiple societal benefits is vital to build on the success of the first government agri-tech strategy from 10 years ago, according to a new report from Agri-TechE.


The organisation's ‘Back to the Future' report, marking 10 years of the not-for-profit membership organisation, provides a 360-degree overview of what is needed to maintain the momentum from the 2013 AgriTech Strategy. It reflects on both the successes and current challenges agri-tech faces.

Responses from over 70 contributors, including innovative farming businesses and estates, researchers and technology developers, investors, and technical and commercial service providers, shaped the report.

While there is much optimism for the next decade of agri-tech innovation, contributors also identify challenges, including a changed investment landscape, difficulties scaling solutions and businesses, a lack of secure revenue streams, and regulators failing to keep pace with innovation.

The responses clearly highlight the need for a new government agri-tech strategy, following on from the transformational strategy from 2013, says Dr Belinda Clarke, Agri-TechE director.

"The 2013 strategy engendered a lot of fresh thinking, energy, external investment and innovation in the agricultural and horticultural sectors," she says. "But the sector is now in a very different place and needs new government focus to shape the future of agri-tech to enable it to help the sector meet new priorities."

These include a much greater emphasis on climate-smart agriculture to reduce greenhouse gas emissions, and aligning on-farm productivity with environmental sensitivity to help reverse biodiversity declines and maintain clear water and air.

The government should also recognise that the sector delivers much more than just food and beverages; it also includes ecosystem services and industrial feedstocks such as biofuels, pharmaceuticals, and raw materials for textiles and construction.

"We need the new government to deliver a strategy for agriculture and horticulture that recognises the industry as a key component of our bioeconomy," Dr Clarke says. "This, in turn, will inform a refreshed agri-tech strategy as one of the key enablers of unlocking the industry's potential."

Clear policies give clarity on the direction of travel and build confidence, she stresses. "Well-defined, long-term sector strategies can lever private investment and provide a roadmap for innovation success. A new strategy for the next decade is needed."

Among the other challenges for agri-tech companies identified in the report is how regulation is failing to keep pace with innovation. An example is the lack of clear regulation for emerging trends, such as the use of biological products. For agri-tech developers, earlier engagement with regulators from the outset of innovation is vital, the report suggests.

Scaling solutions also remains challenging, which could at least be partially helped through more government support for businesses, potentially via contracts or subsidies to help boost nascent industries. Without secure revenue streams, markets can be tough to penetrate.

Equally importantly, agri-tech developers are struggling to calculate return on investments for farmers - vital information for farmers to decide whether to embrace a new technology. That is leading to some on-farm fatigue, the report reveals, along with some technologies and businesses failing to deliver on their hype.

"We need to stop promising farmers that a technology is going to change the world tomorrow," Dr Clarke stresses. "While some farmers are happy to be beta-testers, the majority want reliability and seek solutions that will work the first time."

The report identifies there is no shortage of new technology to help farmers in the future. From conversational artificial intelligence that will allow users to ask specific questions of their data - and get sensible answers - to sensors that help growers understand what plants need for optimum nutrition and performance, and genetic tools for breeding plants and animals with valuable new traits.

These and other technologies will potentially deliver solutions to reduce greenhouse gas emissions, reverse biodiversity loss and maintain water quality.

Developments such as satellite imaging and GPS navigation, clean energy production through ground source heat pumps and anaerobic digestion, innovative lighting solutions, livestock wearables and metagenomic sequencing of plants, animals and microbes show how farm agri-tech has come in the past decade, Dr Clarke says.

"The agri-tech community is collectively very optimistic about the next decade, but a new agri-tech strategy would give the granular clarity to inspire further transformative innovations," she concludes.

The full Back to the Future report is available on the Agri-TechE website. https://www.agri-tech-e.co.uk/back-to-the-future-birthday-report/

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