A significant share of global food loss occurs after harvest not because food is not grown, but because processing, technology, logistics, and markets are poorly coordinated.
GNiS is an early-stage initiative designing system-level solutions that connect producers, equipment manufacturers, technical expertise, and markets to reduce post-harvest losses and improve value creation.
Our approach
GNiS explores a decentralized–centralized model: value addition close to production, combined with centralized coordination, standards, and system design.
The global food system loses immense value between production and processing not because food is scarce, but because post-harvest systems remain fragmented, inefficient, and poorly coordinated.
Raw agricultural products often travel long distances for processing, branding, and distribution, increasing costs, emissions, and vulnerability to global shocks from climate stress to geopolitical disruption.
GNiS addresses this structural gap by enabling smarter value creation closer to where food is produced, while maintaining global standards for quality, compliance, and market access.
The result is a more resilient, efficient, and balanced food system — one that benefits producers, consumers, and markets alike, and strengthens food security across regions: