Tech startups trying to fill tech gap

on Feb1
by | Comments Off on Tech startups trying to fill tech gap |

A worker refills a robotic dispenser by eFishery, an agritech startup, at a fish farm in Subang Regency in West Java, Indonesia, in June 2022. The startup helps farmers optimize their processes through automatic feeders and mobile apps.

Dimas Ardian | Bloomberg | Getty Images

Indonesia’s tech startups are reeling in big money in seafood farming. That shouldn’t come as a surprise — the archipelago is home to one of the world’s longest coastlines and over 18,000 islands and islets.

But there’s another reason: A “technology gap” is holding the industry back from realizing its vast potential, according to investors and startups that CNBC spoke to.

Last year, several startups raised millions of dollars from big name investors to fill that gap: eFishery ($90 million in Series C), Aruna ($30 million in follow-on Series A), Delos ($8 million in seed extension) and FishLog ($3.5 million in pre-Series A).

“Indonesia is the second largest wild catch producer in the world after China. And we are third in aquaculture production after China and India. But if we talk about exports in terms of value, we are only 12th place in the world,” said Farid Naufal Aslam, co-founder and CEO of Aruna, a fisheries e-commerce startup. Aquaculture is the controlled cultivation of aquatic organisms such as fish and shellfish, especially for human consumption.

Aquaculture production and exports by country in 2020

Aquaculture (animals, not including algae) Top producing countries in 2020 Top exporting countries in 2020
1. China China
2. India Norway
3. Indonesia Vietnam
4. Vietnam Chile
5. Bangladesh India
Sources: FAO, Statista

“A lot of decisions made are based on gut feeling or what ancestors have been doing for the past 60 years,” said Guntur Mallarangeng, co-founder and CEO of shrimp farm management company Delos.

And he’s not alone in thinking that.

“Indonesia’s fisheries industry has a lot of old-style players that have passed on conventional business practices from generation to generation,” said Yinglan Tan, founding managing partner and CEO of Singapore-based Insignia Ventures Partners, which invested in FishLog.

Helping farmers ‘grow’

Those in Indonesia’s fisheries industry need more efficient technology and better processes, according to Tan.

“The only way that the industry can grow is when the farmers grow. If the farmers don’t grow and expand their businesses, we can’t really produce more fish,” said Gibran Huzaifah Amsi El Farizy, founder and CEO of eFishery, an aquatech startup.

eFishery helps farmers optimize their processes through automatic feeders and mobile apps. The automatic feeders detect the hunger levels of fish and shrimp through their movements, which prevents a problem more common in the manual process: over- and under-feeding.

Read more about tech and crypto from CNBC Pro

Farizy started his own catfish pond in 2009 while he was a student to supplement his family’s income. By the time he graduated, he was managing 76 ponds, and started exploring how he could use tech to help farmers.

He then built the prototype for the automatic feeder in 2012 and launched it in 2013.

“The feeding costs consist of 70%-90% of the total costs. So [automatic feeding] can increase the productivity and reduce the costs,” Farizy said. He claimed that the automatic feeders can reduce the feeding costs by 28%.

Aruna, for its part, helps to connect Indonesia’s small-scale aquaculture farmers to buyers. It claims it works with 40,000 fisherman across 170 locations.

Indonesia has the puzzle pieces to become a global leader in aquaculture and seafood production. Once we figure out how to put them together, we should be able to become a seafood powerhouse in the global market.

Guntur Mallarangeng

Co-founder and CEO of Delos

Potential to be a global leader

Indonesia Investment Authority names the four areas it's paying attention to


Previous postSmucker is the only new 'dividend aristocrat' worth buying Next postBritain sets out plans to regulate crypto industry in wake of FTX collapse


Los Angeles Financial times


Copyright © 2024 Los Angeles Financial times

Updates via RSS
or Email