Description

List of 3 large food venture capital investors
The food industry is a huge sector that focuses on the supply, development, distribution, and logistics of food related products. Additionally, farming, agtech, and foodtech are also part of the industry. This article highlights three VC investors that are interested in supporting the food industry.
1. Tyson Ventures (USA)
Tyson Ventures is the investment part of Tyson Foods. They are investing in early-stage projects that focus on providing sustainable nutrition to the global population. Currently, they are mainly supporting businesses targeting emerging proteins, technology, and sustainability. A promising company in their portfolio is Future Meat, who grow meat from high-quality, non-GMO animal cells in a lab.
2. Eatable Adventures (Spain)
Eatable Adventures is a VC that has a €50M fund targeting foodtech startups in Europe and Latin America. Altogether, the company has supported over 25,000 startup founders and entrepreneurs and per year they evaluate over 2,400 projects. One of them is Ekonoke, a sustainable and reliable solution for climate-resilient agriculture.
3. Wittington Ventures (Canada)
Wittington Ventures is a Canadian VC investor that focuses on technology startups in e-commerce/retail, healthcare, and the food sector. An interesting portfolio company is Brave Health, a telehealth-enabled mental health care provider. Another is Motif Foodworks, who are developing plant-based alternatives to conventional food products.
Picture Source: Hermes Rivera
Included information in our food investor list
Our keyword analysis-based list includes the following general columns:
- Name of the VC fund
- Country of origin
- URL
- E-mail (general)
- Investment focus (if data available)
- Corporate VC (yes/no)
The following columns are based on the keyword crawler, which is a Python-based, in-house developed tool that crawls every page for at least 45 seconds to find the respective keywords.
- total_frequency (e.g.: 4173) – total counted occurrences of keywords on the VC website
- average_keyword_rate (e.g. 0.16) – average rate of keyword occurrences per subpage in relation with total number of words
- most_common_keyword (e.g. „food“) – keyword that was counted the most often on respective VC website
- most_common_keyword_frequency (e.g. 3478) – number of times the most common keyword was counted
- sub_url_highest_rate (e.g. https://www.spventures.com.br/esgeng) – sub url with the highest number of found keywords
- highest_rate (e.g. 0.15) – highest keyword rate per subpage
- frequency_per_keyword: {‘food’: 3478, ‘nutrition’: 347, ‘foods’: 694, ‘beverage’: 0, ‘drinks’: 0, ‘snacks’: 0} – dictionary of number of keyword occurrences per keyword
Picture Source: Brooke Lark

Results of our keyword analysis
In the next paragraph, we are focusing on insights derived from our keyword research, which was based on our list of the 2,500 largest VC investors worldwide.
Percentage of VC funds that invest in start-ups in the food sector
Our keyword crawler analyzed more than 2,500 venture capital funds regarding food investment keywords. We found out that 46.5 % of the global VC funds mention food.
Focus on food and nutrition
This bar chart shows the most important keywords from our keyword search, however most companies use the keyword food to describe their vc company focus. Additionally, the terms nutrition, foods, and beverages are used whereas drinks and snacks are not as frequent.

Countries of food startup investors
The most common countries for food startup investors are the USA. For instance, the previously presented investor Tyson Ventures is located in Springdale, Arkansas. Also, a lot of food investors are located in Germany, the UK, Switzerland, and France. These countries are known for their strong food industries and have a long history of producing high-quality food and beverages. In addition, many of these countries are home to world-renowned chefs and restaurants, which makes them attractive locations for food startups looking to make a name for themselves. As a result, these countries are home to many successful food startups and are popular destinations for investors looking to invest in the food sector.
Edmund (verified owner) –
Good entries, thanks