logo
Gulfood 2025 Dubai: Day one focuses on AI adoption and healthy ready-to-go meal boom

Gulfood 2025 Dubai: Day one focuses on AI adoption and healthy ready-to-go meal boom

The National17-02-2025

Tens of thousands descended on Dubai World Trade Centre on Monday as Gulfood kicked off its 30th event, with the topics of global food trends and the use of artificial intelligence to create enhanced supply chain efficiency in the spotlight. More than 5,000 exhibitors from 129 countries vied for attention as industry professionals, policymakers and investors milled around the myriad stands that showcased about one million products from a variety of categories, including meat and poultry, dairy, pulses and world foods. Sheikh Mohammed bin Rashid, Vice President and Ruler of Dubai, was among those in attendance. "We are proud of what Dubai and the Emirates have achieved in this sector, and we welcome specialists from all over the world," he wrote on X. This year's theme is The Next Frontier in Food and debuts the Food500Summit, bringing together industry leaders to tackle challenges and opportunities across the food value chain. On the first day, this included Hemen Ruparel, chief executive of Indian food manufacturer Samex Enterprises, who spoke about the importance of understanding the consumer of tomorrow by using AI-driven tools to predict demand. 'It will be about immediate gratification,' he said, addressing the summit. 'The consumer will say, 'I want it now and I need it exactly the way I want it, with no sugar and all the ingredients my doctor has put in my health goals. And I want it accurate and speedy.'' While this level of AI-driven personalisation has been adopted in many industries, from pharmaceuticals to cosmetics, the food and beverage industry has been slow to get on board, said Mr Ruparel. 'The customer wants continuous engagement, they want feedback, they want to give feedback and get recommendations using AI tools,' he continued, adding that this level of personalisation will have huge benefits for supply chain efficiency and cost-cutting. 'AI tools will lead to digital transformation, developing automation and insight to enhance visibility, intelligence, efficiency and agility in the supply chain. We are coming back to first principles – grow the food you need and eat the food you need,' he added. 'There is enough food on the planet, we just need AI to use it properly.' Alan Smith, chief executive of UAE-based food and beverage company Agthia Group, emphasised in his talk that AI adoption in the industry is 'critical'. 'It allows manufacturers to reduce waste in our supply chain and allow us to focus on making products consumers actually want,' he said. 'The future of food isn't just being shaped in kitchens – it's being shaped in algorithms and these algorithms are shaping our success as a business.' Among the stands, there was a clear trend of health-promoting products and ready-to-go snacks and meals, reflecting a rising interest from consumers for these categories on a local level. 'The momentum towards convenience just keeps getting stronger,' said Ashvin Subramanyam, chief executive of Orkla India, which is launching its line of preservative-free five-minute breakfast dishes targeting the UAE's Keralite market this June. 'We see this worldwide as societies evolve in prosperity – as the prosperity index goes upwards, the time index goes downwards … At the same time, consumers want products that are as close to fresh as possible, but they also want it to be convenient – and at a price that works. But these requirements are often opposing.' The company took two years to develop its Eastern Five-Minute Breakfast range, which delivers authentic Keralan taste in three easy steps, with dishes including puttu, idiyappam, idli, dosa and palappam. The aim is to preserve time-honoured culinary traditions, while also catering to the modern, time-conscious consumer. From the region, Healthy and Tasty, which was created in Egypt but has manufacturing facilities in Saudi Arabia, was marketing its healthy beverages and snacks. High demand for these products in the UAE means they are now also setting up a local production facility. Healthy Cola, which is aspartame- and sugar-free, using the natural sweetening agent stevia, is its 'hero' product, said export development director Tamer Gharib. 'It's a new launch item and we have already started to export it to nine different countries within only three months,' he said. He added that the stand had received a lot of interest from US buyers on day one of the event. Invest Northern Ireland is also tapping into these trends, bringing a range of brands that cater to time-poor but health-conscious buyers, which they've noted is a growing segment in the UAE. 'Food provenance also plays a very important role as consumers want to know where they're food is coming from,' regional director Sheethal Rishi told The National. 'We get these niche supermarkets and buyers looking for that food provenance, traceability, clean ingredients and also products that cater to the diverse population here in the UAE.' One such brand is White's Oats, which was established in 1841 and is one of the world's oldest oats millers. The Irish brand is now bringing its instant oats to the UAE, including new high-protein options with limited sugar content. Commercial director Mark Gowdy said the company has had huge interest from the region, as more consumers realise the benefits that oats can bring, not just for cardiovascular health, but also for gut health, which is a popular talking point in the industry. 'People who eat sugar already buy into the ready-to-go category, so [with the instant oats] my task is to try and bring in people who don't already eat this product.' Neil Hubbard, from vegan, all-natural brand Noisy Snacks, has noticed a similar trend, particularly in the region. The Northern Irish brand launched its pulse-based snacks in the UAE two weeks ago and has already seen enormous interest, he told The National. These include beef brisket-flavoured crunchy broad beans and jalapeño, vegan cheese-coated chickpeas. 'We're seeing the same trends on a more global and regional level, too, with a focus on clean ingredients, natural flavours, healthier snacking, but also adventurous flavours. People want healthier snacks, but they want things that actually taste good."

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

H.H. Sheikh Abdullah concludes visit to US to bolster bilateral cooperation
H.H. Sheikh Abdullah concludes visit to US to bolster bilateral cooperation

Dubai Eye

timean hour ago

  • Dubai Eye

H.H. Sheikh Abdullah concludes visit to US to bolster bilateral cooperation

His Highness Sheikh Abdullah bin Zayed Al Nahyan, the UAE's Deputy Prime Minister and Minister of Foreign Affairs, concluded a visit to the US aimed at strengthening cooperation in economic development, trade, AI, and regional security. During the visit, Sheikh Abdullah held talks with US Secretary of State Marco Rubio, as well as senior officials from the White House, members of Congress, and other key government figures, to advance the UAE-US strategic partnership. He also met with Steve Witkoff, US Special Envoy to the Middle East, and Stephen Miller, Deputy Chief of Staff for Policy and Homeland Security Adviser, to discuss regional developments and shared efforts toward peace and stability. Talks with US Secretary of Commerce Howard Lutnick centred on economic and trade collaboration. In engagements with several members of Congress, Sheikh Abdullah reaffirmed the UAE's commitment to deepening ties with the US, emphasising shared goals of peace, prosperity, and international cooperation.

G42 Plants Flag in London to Power Europe's AI Ambition
G42 Plants Flag in London to Power Europe's AI Ambition

Arabian Post

time2 hours ago

  • Arabian Post

G42 Plants Flag in London to Power Europe's AI Ambition

G42 has unveiled a new London‑based subsidiary, G42 Europe & UK, designed to amplify its AI infrastructure and services across the United Kingdom and continental Europe. The entity, co‑chaired by Omar Mir and Marty Edelman, will deliver end‑to‑end AI offerings—from advisory and model deployment to supercomputing infrastructure—for sectors including finance, healthcare, energy and manufacturing. The launch comes as G42 continues its strategic European rollout, following the roll‑out of AI compute clusters and data‑centre capabilities in France and Italy. Positioned at the heart of London, the new hub aims to serve as a local nexus for AI innovation, bridging the gulf between regulatory frameworks and technological delivery. Omar Mir, an international board member at World Wide Technology with more than two decades of experience in 5G, cloud and AI services across Europe and the Middle East, will co‑lead the initiative. His counterpart, Marty Edelman, G42's group general counsel, brings deep expertise in legal oversight and governance—a reflection of G42's emphasis on secure, sovereign deployment in regulated markets. ADVERTISEMENT Mir emphasised the vision: 'Our goal is to harness G42's proven AI expertise and localise it for European and UK businesses—fuelling digital transformation, enhancing competitiveness, and building resilient, sovereign AI infrastructure in partnership with public and private stakeholders'. Edelman added that the UK and Europe represent dynamic markets with significant scope for AI‑driven innovation, and that a London hub enables the company to align closely with local regulatory regimes. G42 Europe & UK will leverage the group's global computing backbone—comprising supercomputing nodes, data centres and AI‑modeling platforms—to deliver a full spectrum of capabilities. Services will span strategic advisory, AI model development, infrastructure deployment and managed services, all with a focus on local data sovereignty and regulatory compliance. The initiative complements G42's earlier announcements of strategic investments in AI infrastructure in France and Italy. In Italy, G42 is partnering on a €1 billion supercomputing build with iGenius, while in France it has established an AMD‑powered AI facility in Grenoble. The London operation is expected to accelerate regulatory engagement and foster partnerships tailored to the European sovereignty agenda. Analysts suggest the move is part of a broader ambition by the UAE and G42 to position themselves as credible alternatives to US and Chinese cloud and AI providers. By offering sovereign, locally governed infrastructure, G42 aims to appeal to European clients seeking secure, high‑performance computing solutions. G42's broader portfolio, including Khazna data centres, Core42 sovereign‑cloud capabilities, cybersecurity firm CPX, analytics outfit Presight and AI lab Inception, will support the London hub's operations. This integrated ecosystem underpins G42's 'Intelligence Grid', a unified platform delivering enterprise‑grade AI research, analytics and cloud services. London's strategic significance is two‑fold. As a pre‑Brexit financial and regulatory anchor, it provides a gateway to both UK and EU markets. Moreover, it enhances G42's ability to work alongside national and regional authorities in shaping next‑generation AI infrastructure and data governance frameworks. Employee responses on social media underline the positive reception. A post from G42's LinkedIn noted the subsidiary 'will drive localized AI solutions and lead infrastructure build‑outs across the UK and continental Europe,' garnering broad applauds from industry peers. Industry observers acknowledge that G42's European foothold aligns with wider trends in AI geopolitics. Investment in local compute and data sovereignty reflects growing European determination to reduce dependency on US or Chinese technology ecosystems while scaling home‑grown digital capacity.

India faces two years of sugar surplus, growers and officials say
India faces two years of sugar surplus, growers and officials say

Gulf Today

time5 hours ago

  • Gulf Today

India faces two years of sugar surplus, growers and officials say

India is set to produce surplus sugar for at least two consecutive years, as millions of farmers expand the area under sugarcane cultivation amid ample rainfall, boosting crop yields, growers and industry officials said. The rebound in production would allow the world's second-largest sugar producer to increase exports in 2025/26, they said, after poor rainfall cut sugarcane yields and led to two years of export restrictions. 'Sugarcane usually gives us good returns, but sometimes we can't plant it due to a lack of water,' said Umesh Jagtap as he planted the crop on a three-acre plot in Maharashtra, a leading sugar producing state in the west. 'This year, we had heavy rain in May, and the forecast says more rain is on the way. So we're planning to plant more than usual.' Farmers from Maharashtra and neighbouring Karnataka struggle to irrigate their sugarcane crop in May. This year, however, Maharashtra and Karnataka received 1,007 per cent and 234 per cent more rainfall than average, respectively. The rainfall will benefit the crop to be harvested in the 2025/26 season, starting October, and will also support planting for the 2026/27 harvest, said Prakash Naiknavare, managing director of the National Federation of Cooperative Sugar Factories (NFCSF). Sugarcane typically takes 10 to 18 months from planting to harvest. As a result, farmers who began planting this month are expected to harvest their crop during the 2026/27 season. The NFCSF estimates gross sugar production in 2025/26 to rise by nearly a fifth from a year earlier, reaching 35 million metric tonnes. For the 2024/25 marketing year to September, India's net sugar production is expected to fall below consumption for the first time in eight years. This decline stems from a 2023 drought that hit sugarcane planting and forced India to prohibit sugar exports in 2023/24 and allowing merely 1 million tonnes in 2024/25. India was the world's No. 2 sugar exporter during the five years to 2022/23, with volumes averaging 6.8 million tonnes annually. 'Looks like production is set to bounce back strongly, so New Delhi will probably have no trouble allowing exports of over 3 million tonnes in the next season starting October,' said a Mumbai-based trader with a global trade house. Meanwhile Cristal Union, France's second-largest sugar and ethanol maker, on Tuesday posted a 62 per cent fall in net profit in 2024/25 to 117 million euros ($134 million), weighed down by a fall in sugar prices, and warned of weak results in the current fiscal year. Sales for the year ended January 31 declined to 2.65 billion euros from 2.8 billion the previous year, while adjusted earnings before interest, tax, depreciation and amortisation (EBITDA) fell by a third to 287 million euros, the cooperative said. Other European sugar and ethanol groups, including France's largest producer Tereos and Germany's Suedzucker, have also posted steep profit declines, pressured by weak European sugar prices amid high local supply and strong Ukrainian imports. Higher volumes partly offset the decline in European sugar prices and limited the fall in revenue, the group said. However, a further slide in sugar prices since the start of the year and high costs were likely to weigh on this year's results, it said. 'The Group expects sharply lower results for 2025/26, as a result of much more unfavourable market conditions and sharply rising agricultural and industrial production costs,' the group said in a statement. Meanwhile Argentina's government has increased the prices of sugar- and corn-based bioethanol for mandatory blending with fuels for local use, according to a resolution published in the Official Gazette on Friday. The Energy Secretariat, under the Ministry of Economy, set the price of sugarcane-based bioethanol at 792.122 pesos (about $0.67) per liter, up from the previous price of 788.181 pesos per liter. Meanwhile, the price of corn-based bioethanol rose to 726 pesos per liter (about $0.61), up from 722.395 pesos before the resolution was announced. The changes take effect from the date of publication in the Official Gazette and will remain in effect until a new price is published to replace them. Reuters

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store