The world has more mouths to feed than ever before. Food production has scaled up to meet the demand, but churning out more food also carries an environmental impact and potentially compromises its quality. Singaporean startup Profile Print has developed technology it hopes will address this challenge.
Agricultural businesses spend millions of dollars each year shipping samples back and forth to one another. But one Singapore-based tech company claims to have found a solution to the industry’s logistical costs and carbon footprint.
“The current process is that whenever you have a buyer and a seller, the buyer will require physical samples before they place orders. You can typically imagine a two to three round process between a buyer and a seller,” Profile Print founder and CEO Alan Lai told “CNBC Tech: The Edge.”
“Profile Print digitalizes food ingredients, so that buyers and sellers no longer need to ship samples physically,” Lai added.
Using its patented digital fingerprint technology, Profile Print quickly analyzes the identity and quality of ingredients.
In 2024, Profile Print signed agreements with Brazil’s two largest coffee manufacturers, as well as Instituto CNA, a government-backed institution representing Brazil’s agricultural sectors.
“Typically for our clients who do not have Profile Print, they would need to actually roast this green coffee bean, grind it to a certain size, brew the coffee, let it cool down and get a team of people to taste it before they can make a decision of buying or selling,” Lai said.
Through the startup’s platform, agribusinesses can create their own artificial intelligence models, which are able to assess whether the raw ingredient is a good fit. Traders can also build AI models for specific clients to determine whether the product fits their look and flavor preferences.
Watch Alan Lai demonstrate Profile Print’s technology in the video above.