India Leads Southeast Asia's $90B AgriTech Boom, Study Reveals

A new study forecasts that digitalization and AgriTech adoption could unlock $90 billion in annual GDP gains for Southeast Asia by 2033, with India's mature ecosystem serving as a key roadmap. The region's AgriTech investment peaked at over $750 million in 2022 before experiencing a sharp 70% decline by 2025, reflecting a market correction. The research identifies digital value chains, inclusive AgriFinTech, agrifood life sciences, and sustainable consumer brands as the most promising verticals for growth. It warns that premature regional expansion has been a primary cause of venture failure, advocating for patient capital and local execution.

Key Points: India Unlocks $90B AgriTech Growth in Southeast Asia

  • $90B GDP potential by 2033
  • Investment fell 70% after 2022 peak
  • Four key verticals show momentum
  • Premature expansion a major cause of failure
  • Corporate acquisitions dominate exits
2 min read

India to unlock Southeast Asia's USD 90 billion AgriTech growth potential: Study

Study shows digitalization could unlock $90B in annual GDP for Southeast Asia by 2033, with India providing a roadmap for success.

"Patient, disciplined capital that understands local market dynamics is what moves these ecosystems forward. - Mark Kahn"

New Delhi, April 3

Digitalisation and AgriTech adoption in Southeast Asia could unlock a whopping $90 billion in annual GDP gains by 2033, with India leading the way, according to a study authored by Omnivore, Beanstalk AgTech, and Briter.

The study argues that digitalisation and increased adoption could unlock these annual GDP gains by 2033, detailing how the region is currently navigating a sharp market correction. AgriTech investment across Southeast Asia peaked at over USD 750 million in 2022 but fell nearly 70 per cent by 2025.

The decline reflects a period where investors began reassessing the structural realities of fragmented value chains and the difficulties of scaling ventures across diverse South Asian markets.

Agriculture remains a critical pillar for the region, contributing roughly 15 per cent of GDP and employing 40 per cent of the total workforce. The study identifies four specific verticals showing the most credible momentum: digital value chains, inclusive AgriFinTech, agrifood life sciences, and sustainable consumer brands.

"We've spent over a decade investing in Indian AgriTech, watching the ecosystem mature through governance, exit opportunities, and the hard work of building market infrastructure," said Mark Kahn, Managing Partner at Omnivore.

"Agritech landscape in Southeast Asia is navigating a similar journey and India's experience offers a genuine roadmap. The fragmentation is real, but so is the opportunity to uplift agricultural production and farmer communities across the region. Patient, disciplined capital that understands local market dynamics is what moves these ecosystems forward," Kahn added.

The study's findings challenge several assumptions that have shaped investment into the region, noting that two-thirds of cross-border expansion attempts have failed. The most defensible opportunities are currently single-market plays built around local execution teams.

"Premature regional expansion was cited as the cause of failure in over 60% of venture collapses between 2022 and 2025," the study said. "On exits, corporate acquisitions account for roughly 75% of liquidity events across the ecosystem since 2020, with only eight IPOs completed in the same period."

The study suggested that Southeast Asia should look toward India's BSE SME and NSE Emerge platforms. These dedicated listing routes for growth-stage ventures operate below traditional IPO thresholds and could provide a necessary exit pathway for regional startups.

"DFIs and impact investors have committed a combined USD 650 million to agrifood funds across the region and remain essential to the capital stack," the study noted. The next phase of scaling, according to the authors, will require blending equity, credit, and concessional capital.

- ANI

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Reader Comments

S
Sarah B
The point about premature regional expansion is so crucial. I've seen too many startups burn cash trying to be in five countries at once. Focus on solving one problem deeply in one market first, like many successful Indian AgriTechs did. The $90B potential is real, but discipline is key.
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Priya S
As someone from a farming family in Punjab, I truly hope this tech reaches the small farmers. The study talks about "inclusive AgriFinTech" – this is vital. Access to credit and insurance through apps can change lives. But the solutions must be simple and in local languages.
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Michael C
Interesting read. The comparison to India's SME listing platforms (BSE SME/NSE Emerge) is a smart suggestion for exit strategies. Provides a realistic alternative to the traditional IPO route which is often out of reach. Patient capital is indeed the need of the hour.
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Rohit P
While the potential is huge, let's not forget the ground reality. The article itself says investment fell 70% by 2025. Investors got spooked. We need sustainable models that improve farmer income, not just fancy apps. The focus should be on real impact, not valuation.
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Kavya N
The four verticals mentioned make sense. Especially "sustainable consumer brands" – there's a growing demand for traceable, ethically sourced food. Indian brands like Licious and Yoga Bar have paved the way. Southeast Asia has amazing produce; branding it right is the next step!

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