Farms.com Home   News

Impact Venture Capital Formed, Will Invest In Agricultural Technology

New investment firm Impact Venture Capital is leveraging its strategic location in California to identify investment opportunities in agriculture technology. Agtech is a natural fit for the VC startup, given the firm's proximity to Silicon Valley with offices in both Sacramento and Burlingame, and Impact is actively scouting and vetting opportunities locally and beyond.

Launched about a month ago, Impact Venture Capital was founded by Jack Crawford, Dixon Doll and Eric Ball with a mandate to invest in areas where information technology (IT) converges with large global markets, including agriculture.

"Being located in Northern California, responsible for $20 billion of ag exports each year, and up the street from UC Davis, the global leader in ag research with a $700M aggregate R&D budget, we are highly enthusiastic about the ag sector and impressed with the new companies we are seeing the information technology/ag convergence area of innovation," Crawford tells GAI News.

Crawford, who in addition to being a venture capitalist is an entrepreneur in his own right, recruited John Finegan, a 35-year agriculture industry veteran and founder of agriculture consulting firm Beck Ag, to advise on the agtech opportunities. (The pair has collaborated before on Crawford's other VC brand, Velocity Venture Capital.) The areas of focus span water management technology, information technology and data as well as the Internet of Things (IoT) and precision ag, and ag biotech, for instance.

"Over the past three years, something like $6 billion in venture capital has gone into agtech, so Impact VC's interest in agtech investing is pretty strong," Finegan says.

In addition to agriculture, Impact Venture Capital invests in healthcare, energy, security, and education. Meanwhile, the pipeline for potential ag-tech investments is growing.

Investment Opportunity

Impact Venture Capital is currently looking at companies that are focused on the farm data management area.

"We're based in California, so irrigation or water sensor technology are an area with big opportunities going forward," says Finegan, pointing to watering systems that are placed into the field. "They're permanent probes and they actually run the irrigation system," he says. "You're only watering when the plants need it. It's a more efficient way to deliver water." Desalination is another area on Impact Venture Capital's radar.

Indeed, water will be a "big battle" in agriculture over the coming decades, explains Finegan, given the potential implications from global warming and droughts. "We've had three years of drought in California. Folks are looking at any way they can to reduce their water usage," he says, adding that there's not enough water available to use it unwisely.

Silicon Valley might need to look beyond California to solve the water challenge, however. Compared to America's heartland, California agtech remains in the nascent stages.

"I don't find that a lot of the Silicon Valley folks have the background, expertise and networking that's needed in agriculture. They're looking at ag as a great opportunity and saying 'the industry is going to embrace this new technology,' whether it's precision ag, GPS data, sensors, or IoT. That's been their motivation more than a deep understanding of the ag market," explains Finegan.

As a result, some Silicon Valley entrepreneurs lack a solid grasp of agriculture. Meanwhile, they're directing their budgets exclusively to technology development while overlooking another vital piece of the equation - marketing and channel access. "They're not investing in that," says Finegan.

Finegan suggests Silicon Valley entrepreneurs might want to take a page out of the book of a company that's done this before, such as century-old Pioneer Seed. According to Finegan, Pioneer spends millions of dollars developing a seed hybrid or chemical. Meanwhile, the company will similarly direct millions of dollars in the first year driving adoption and getting the product out there for growers to try. Silicon Valley hasn't quite figured this formula out yet.

"I look at the spend of a lot of the agtech, VC-backed companies that are raising $50 million," says Finegan. "Most of that is going into the technology development. But then I don't see them being aggressive in channel access, engagement and driving the adoption of the product."

He goes on to explain that in agriculture, the game is all about getting people to try a product. He offers the following advice to Silicon Valley entrepreneurs who are taking on ag tech:

-Year one should be about building advocacy and driving adoption.

-Establish a base and grow that base for the future.

-Establish the word of mouth and the advocacy for that product.
 

Click here to see more...

Trending Video

Will the 2025 USDA December Crop Report Be a Market Mover/Surprise?

Video: Will the 2025 USDA December Crop Report Be a Market Mover/Surprise?


Historically, the USDA December crop report is a non-event or another dud report as the USDA reserves any final supply changes to the final report in January of the following year in this case 2026. But after the longest U.S. government shutdown in history at 43 days and no October crop report will they provide more data/surprise and make an exception?
Our China U.S. soybean purchase tracker is now at 26.6% or a total of 3.2 mmt but for traders it’s taking too long to unfold.
The final Stats Canada production report was bearish canola and wheat projection a record crop in both (it adds to the global glut of supplies) and bullish local corn and soybean prices in Ontario/Quebec thanks to a drought. It will not help the fund flow short-term, the USDA may need to offset it?
A U.S. Fed interest rate cut of another 25-basis point next Wednesday (probability 87.1%) could help fund flow and sentiment in stock and ag commodities into year end.
More inflows into Bitcoin this past week saw prices rebound back above 90,000 with support at 82,000 and resistance at 96,000.
A V-shaped bottom in cattle suggest the lows are in after Mexico reported another new world screwworm case. Lower weights, seasonal demand and higher U.S. beef select/choice values with a continued closure of the Mexican border to cattle will result in a resumption of higher cattle futures into yearend.
Australia is expected to produce its 3rd largest wheat crop ever at 36 mmt adding to the global glut of supplies.
Reports of ASF in hogs in Spain the largest pork exporter in Europe could see the U.S. win more pork export business long-term.
If the rains verify into next week of 3-5 inches for Brazil it would go a long way to fixing the dry regions from the last 2-months, but the European weather model has been wrong for the past 2-months!
Natural gas futures are surging to the 3rd price count as frigid hold temps set in.
CDN $ is also surging to end the week on a very resilient economy and better employment numbers suggesting no interest rate cuts next week.
Finally, the CFTC report showed funds were net buyers of soybeans but sellers of corn, canola and wheat. In real time the funds have gone back to selling as they take some profits.