News
New Artificial Photosynthesis Method Grows Food With No Sunshine
New Artificial Photosynthesis Method Grows Food With No Sunshine
Why retailers must embrace a free traceability tool for farmed shrimp
The WWF-inspired free-to-access traceability tool - called transparenC - has huge potential to improve the accountability of the entire shrimp supply chain.
Supreme Court limits Biden's power to cut emissions
The US Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) has lost some of its power to reduce greenhouse gas emissions.
Carbon capture potential of agroforestry and trees on farms
Increased use of trees in agriculture can pave the way toward a transformation of the global food system, according to a new study released in May.
Methane-reducing seaweed asparagopsis up for sale after years of research
The first sale of an emission-reducing cattle feed has been announced in South Australia, marking a milestone after years of research and development.
How Malaysia is stitching together a vibrant agritech tapestry
Yvonne Yong, Director of the Ecosystem Development Division at Malaysia Digital Economy Corporation highlights the key role of the organisation in empowering agriculture technology.
New tech takes fish side streams mainstream
The Waseabi project has made notable progress on a sorting technology that can turn every part of the fish into food and feed, aligning with processing protocols in the meat industry.
In 10 years, CRISPR transformed medicine. Can it now help us deal with climate change?
In 10 years, CRISPR transformed medicine. Can it now help us deal with climate change?
How Nigeria can turn its huge cashew waste into valuable citric acid
Nigeria—the sixth largest producer of cashew nuts globally—exports more than 80% of its raw cashews primarily to Vietman and India where they are processed into various consumer products such as butter, food and cosmetic ingredients.
Agriculture 4.0 is helping farmers do more with less
The fourth agricultural revolution promises to grow more food on less land while feeding more people.