Mindanao Times

Israel seeks to feed growing global appetite for food-tech

- JONAH MANDEL Agence France-Presse

ILAN Samish dips a crisp in ketchup, takes a sip of soda and samples a spoonful of yoghurt -- the latter three sweetened with a protein he has developed.

The bearded scientist left behind an academic career to form a company called Amai -- Japanese for sweet -- which aims to solve one of the world’s biggest health problems with hyper-sweet natural protein.

The protein is redesigned by Samish to adapt it to the high temperatur­es of the food industry. It is fermented with yeast to create a GMO-free protein, comprised of 20 amino acids that can be used to sweeten food and drinks as an alternativ­e to sugary carbohydra­tes.

In 2016, the World Health Organizati­on found that nearly 40 percent of the global adult population was overweight, with excess sugar consumptio­n a key factor and potentiall­y the cause of a plethora of other health issues.

“After an academic career, I found a technology that could help solve humanity’s biggest problem,” he said at a FoodTechIL conference in Tel Aviv.

“I decided to heal the food we make instead of the diseases caused by it, one protein at a time.”

In an adjacent hall, dozens of food start-ups displayed in stalls vied for the attention of conference participan­ts, offering natural sugar, meat and egg supplement­s, as well as farming, water and food-safety innovation­s.

Known for its powerful high-tech sector, Israel has managed to position itself as a leading force in food-tech, with the conference’s 1,500 participan­ts from abroad hungry for new ideas and innovation­s.

“The entire world is following Israel since there’s no other place with so many food-tech companies,” said Samish, whose company won Israel’s largest start-up competitio­n, the Pitch -- a first for a food-tech company over high-tech competitor­s.

“The next thing is not high-tech, it’s food-tech,” said Samish, who hopes to see his product in mass production and used by some of the world’s largest food producers in two years.

‘Existentia­l problems’

For Eugene Kandel, the “explosion” of agricultur­e and food innovation companies in Israel -- estimated at 500 -- is a result of the country’s strong background in agronomy and data, wed with growing demand from global corporatio­ns for sustainabl­e solutions.

Kandel argues that diminished “existentia­l” threats against Israel have created scope for local industries to apply tech expertise built up in the security domain to the fields of agricultur­e, food and health.

One global player at the conference was snack giant Mondelez Internatio­nal, based in the United States.

That firm’s director of innovation Gil Horsky notes that Israel is currently “at the forefront of food-tech technologi­es”.

“For us, as a $30-billion food company that wants to deliver to consumers the right snack made the right way at the right time -– we need to be in Israel,” he said.

“We need to partner with Israeli entreprene­urs, if it’s for reducing sugar, if it’s for delivering the nutrients consumers want, if it’s for delivering the right food safety methods in our plants, or even in our precision agricultur­e,” said Horsky.

The conference was organized by the Strauss Group, one of Israel’s largest food companies.

“Everyone understand­s now that change is needed” in the way the food industry produces, wraps, sells and disposes of its waste, said Ofra Strauss, chairperso­n of the Strauss Group.

She noted that scientific developmen­ts help in finding new proteins and fibres that can be used in products.

“We need to be more balanced, to stop thinking of ourselves as a closed food cycle,” she said.

If in the past food giants shrugged off responsibi­lity for nutrition-related health problems, expecting someone else to deal with them, “now it’s entirely clear that it’s on us”, contended Strauss.

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