Agribusiness Agenda 2014 - Exploring our global future

Agribusiness Agenda 2014, Volume 2

New Zealand’s primary sector must grapple with a range of global forces impacting on society and food producers – if it wants to remain relevant to the world’s agri-food markets of 2050. That is one of the key themes delivered in Volume 2 of the 2014 KPMG Agribusiness Agenda.

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Ian Proudfoot

Global Head of Agribusiness, Partner - Audit

KPMG in New Zealand

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Titled “Exploring our Global Future”, this is the second of two volumes in the 2014 Agribusiness Agenda series.
 

Some of the key findings and recommendations:

  • The Agenda explores 14 global key trends predicted to have the most significant influence on agri-food markets in the next 20 to 30 years. The critical challenge for New Zealand agri companies is to stay relevant to their customers in a world that is “undergoing unprecedented change”.
  • The changing geopolitical landscape is seeing the “wealth pendulum swinging back East”, as many Western economies struggle to adjust to the post-GFC landscape.
  • A key trend is the emergence of new consumer groups – resulting from the growing middle classes in emerging economies, the world’s ageing population, and the increasing number of adherents to major religions.
  • By 2050, 40% of the world’s population (around 3.6 billion people) are expected to be eating in accordance with religious practices – and the effects of this will permeate throughout the global food supply chain.
  • The world’s population will be eating new types of food in the future. New Zealand companies should be willing to explore the development of synthetic laboratory-grown foods, to complement our natural food offerings. Insect-derived proteins are also likely to break out from ethnic diets into the mainstream over the next 20 years.
  • The shift in healthcare focus from curing illness to maintaining wellness is driving demand for nutraceutical foods. Developing these types of products presents a prime opportunity for New Zealand producers.
  • As the world’s natural resources becoming increasingly scarce, New Zealand producers may need to re-think some traditional products. For instance, the dried milk powder segment could be ripe for innovation in a water-constrained world.
  • Maintaining food integrity will be an increasing focus for the global food industry. The Agenda predicts the future establishment of a global food integrity body, responsible for cross-border criminal investigations into food fraud.

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