Arab States look to Israel for Food Sustenance


Arab States look to Israel for Food Sustenance

Food security is emerging as a key area in which the United Arab Emirates is eager for Israeli expertise, investors in each country tell ISRAEL21c.

The Gulf states import more than 90 percent of their food. This has long been a concern, but the issue intensified when pandemic-related transportation stoppages disrupted supply for several months. The UAE now has a food security minister and Food Security Council.

The Abraham Accords announced between Israel and the UAE on August 13—and with Bahrain a month later—give these countries access to promising food-supply solutions from the ground up.

“The Gulf states see how we produce vegetables in the desert and are very impressed. This is essential to them and they seek companies that can deploy technologies tomorrow,” says Edouard Cukierman, chairman of Cukierman Investment House and managing partner at Catalyst Fund.

He and senior partners of his Tel Aviv-based firm recently met with Hamed Ahmed Ali, CEO of Nasdaq Dubai and the local stock exchange, to discuss opportunities for Israeli businesses.

“One topic that came up again and again is food security,” Cukierman tells ISRAEL21c. “They are ready to allocate a lot of funds to assuring their food supply.”

Established Israeli companies in fields such as precision agriculture and irrigation, seed treatment, desalination and solar energy can step swiftly into the welcoming UAE landscape and perhaps even partner with UAE ag-tech startups.

“We have identified 200 companies that we think fit the food-security sector and we’ll choose about 20 that have a major opportunity to deploy in the UAE,” says Cukierman.

He plans to introduce them at the first UAE version of his firm’s GoforIsrael investment conferences, which normally happen in Tel Aviv, China and European countries such as Switzerland.

Abu Dhabi-based investor Ahmed Nasser Al Nowais confirms that producing food locally is a top priority. His country hopes to incorporate Israeli methods to do so economically and sustainably in a semiarid climate.

“In our part of the world they are not focusing on agri-tech enough. I heard Israel has the best startup ecosystem and agri-tech is a big part of that,” Al Nowais says.

Cukierman learned that it’s not only human food security at stake. The UAE’s multimillion-dollar camel racing industry requires a million tons of ultra-premium feed annually.

“They are looking for technology to help with that, and the head of our life-sciences division, Dr. Laurent Choppe, happens to be a veterinarian,” Cukierman relates.

Power in collaboration

Ahmed Nasser Al Nowais tells ISRAEL21c that the Emiratis are “maybe even more excited than you guys” about the normalization agreement with Israel.

“You have more excellent ideas than I ever saw from one country,” he says.

Coming from an investment family office, Al Nowais was an entrepreneur since age 16, and founded Annex Investments in 2017. His broad interests encompass sectors from automotive to fitness, tourism and telecom. Annex has worked with VCs in Germany, India and Silicon Valley.

In addition to Israeli agricultural technologies, he is also looking at health-tech, ed-tech, cybersecurity and machine learning.

Al Nowais chairs the events committee of the new nonprofit, government-supported Emirates Angels Investors Association, which signed a partnership deal with Tel Aviv Capital investment bank and co-hosted an online investor summit on September 22 with Jerusalem-based OurCrowd.

“We’re excited about this historic moment for the region, and to expand a community of peaceful coexistence and, most importantly, build a powerful engine of economic and cultural exchange,” Emirates Angels Chairman Masaood Al Masaood told the multinational audience of about 1,000.

About 2,000 people registered for a follow-up event, “UAE Tech Investment Landscape: Introduction for the Israeli Ecosystem,” broadcast from Abu Dhabi on October 13.

Emirati investors and entrepreneurs talked about opportunities for collaboration in what Sabah al-Binali, OurCrowd’s new Venture Partner and Head of Gulf Region, called the “friendly business environment” of the UAE.

Collaboration is power

Al Nowais tells ISRAEL21c: “The three main objectives of the Emirates Angels Investors Association are to educate angel investors on opportunities and risks; collaborate with incubators and accelerators in the UAE and around the world; and provide [vetted] startups to these angel investors. In a year or two, we want to be a safe place for angel investors to come to the UAE.”

He says mentoring and professional networking are just as vital for startups as financing.

“It’s important to get people to meet and share knowledge and experience. I believe in connecting and collaborating,” says Al Nowais. He expects this will be easy to accomplish with Israelis.

“I think you have the best ecosystem because you collaborate together, even if you have differences. I think this is the power.”

Building gadgets and bridges together

Last February, just before Covid hit the Middle East—and well before the Abraham Accords—Jerusalem-based serial entrepreneur and PICO Venture Partners cofounder and managing partner Elie Wurtman visited the UAE and Bahrain.

UAE investor Ibrahim Ajami had publicly invited Israelis to invest in his country and spurred similar invitations from leaders in other Gulf states.

On October 18, Wurtman flew to the UAE on a historic direct flight from Tel Aviv with a delegation led by U.S. Secretary of the Treasury Steve Mnuchin. (A second group, led by Israel National Security Council head Meir Ben-Shabbat, flew directly to Bahrain to sign a joint communique and eight MoUs regarding future cooperation.)

Wurtman wrote in an English-language Dubai newspaper that he was impressed by the UAE government’s Ministry of Possibilities founded in 2019, and sees many opportunities for Israeli water, desert agriculture and solar technologies, among others.

More than that, he tells ISRAEL21c, “I am most passionate about collaborating around education and creating an exchange between Israeli and Emirati youth to engage in the world of possibilities, innovation and creating a better future for all in the region.”

Next year, Wurtman plans to bring 20 young ambassadors from his PICO Kids initiative—founded in 2012 to provide informal education in STEEM (science, technology, engineering, entrepreneurship and math) to multi-ethnic Jerusalem fourth- to ninth-graders—to meet the next generation of entrepreneurs in the UAE.

“They will build gadgets—and bridges—together. They will meet courageous investors like Ibrahim Ajami, eat hummus together, play backgammon or X-Box, and collectively work to solve some of the region’s most pressing problems.”

Robo-taxis, security doors, COVID-19 fighters

News of joint UAE-Israeli projects and investments has been swirling as thick as a sandstorm. Deals already happening under the radar were revealed, and many new collaborations announced.

An online platform, the UAE-Israel List, was created “to enable like-minded companies and organizations in the UAE and Israel to start networking and build friendship, peace and understanding through advancement of business.”

And it’s not only business; it’s also research and culture. This far from comprehensive list demonstrates the diversity of activity, not counting the area of food security already mentioned:

  • Israel’s Mobileye signed a partnership with UAE-based Al Habtoor Group to deploy a fleet of self-driving robo-taxis in Dubai by the end of 2022.
  • Rafael Advanced Defense Systems, Israel Aerospace Industries and TeraGroup signed agreements with UAE companies concerning Covid-19 research and solution development.
  • The diamond exchanges in Israel and Dubai will open offices in one another’s countries to promote mutual trade.
  • APEX National Investment (UAE) and Sheba Medical Center (Israel) signed a strategic partnership regarding research, technology and medical tourism.
  • Israel’s Mul-T-Lock Group is opening a Dubai subsidiary.
  • The Weizmann Institute of Science (Israel) and Mohamed bin Zayed University (UAE) will collaborate on artificial intelligence research.
  • Dubai-based private equity fund KEN Investments and Barker and Booth Commercial Agency each made their first Israeli investments—KEN in Salaryo and B&B in Fintica, both fintech startups.
  • Arab-Israeli soccer player Dia Saba signed a three-year contract with Dubai-based soccer club Al-Nasr SC.
  • Dr. Uri Pollak from Hadassah University Medical Center in Jerusalem and Dr. Kesava Ramakrishnan from Sheikh Khalifa Medical City in Abu Dhabi co-hosted “The Future of Pediatric Cardiac Critical Care” webinar for 400 physicians and nurses from 35 countries on October 1.
  • The UAE’s Etihad Airways launched a Hebrew-language website for customers interested in the direct Tel Aviv-Abu Dhabi route.
  • The Israel Export Institute signed a joint agreement with the Dubai World Trade Centre Authority to facilitate the participation of Israeli exhibitors in large-scale exhibitions by year-end.
  • The Abu Dhabi Film Commission and the Israel Film Fund will establish joint training and development programs for Emirati and Israeli filmmakers in partnership with the Jerusalem Sam Spiegel Film & Television School.
  • URE Universal of Ramat Gan partnered with the UAE’s Hamad Bin Khalifa Department of Projects to launch an IoT home healthcare kit, HBKiCare, for the UAE and Middle East regional markets.
  • OurCrowd signed a memorandum of understanding with UAE-based Phoenix business development company, and appointed Emirati investor Sabah al-Binalias as its venture partner for the Gulf region.

Edouard Cukierman notes that the UAE is a business hub for the Gulf countries, like Singapore is for Asia. The Emirates has advanced education and healthcare systems, and women are active in the business community.

“This trip to the UAE was the most impressive business trip I’ve ever made,” Cukierman says. “Not only for the magnitude of opportunity but also because we have much in common in our culture, climate and regional geography.”

This article was first published by Israel21c.


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