How AI can be leveraged to reduce food loss, improve nutrition, and cut emissions

Special How AI can be leveraged to reduce food loss, improve nutrition, and cut emissions
Essence Food has combined AI, 3D printing, and advanced freeze-drying techniques to transform surplus produce into nutrient-rich, long-lasting food products. (Supplied)
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Updated 04 April 2025

How AI can be leveraged to reduce food loss, improve nutrition, and cut emissions

How AI can be leveraged to reduce food loss, improve nutrition, and cut emissions
  • By optimizing food processing at its source, AI is playing a role in reducing emissions and making food production more sustainable
  • Preservation techniques, such as freeze-drying and 3D printing, are being optimized with AI to create long-lasting, nutritious products

RIYADH: Artificial intelligence is revolutionizing nearly every industry, and food production is no exception. From precision farming to lab-grown meat, AI is enabling more sustainable, efficient, and innovative ways to feed the world’s growing population.

One of the most promising applications is the use of AI to tackle food loss — one of the biggest challenges facing global food security. Each year, an estimated $1 trillion worth of food is lost before it even reaches consumers due to spoilage, supply chain inefficiencies, and market rejections.

But AI-powered solutions are beginning to change that, helping to extend shelf life, maximize nutritional value, and reduce environmental impact.

At the forefront of this movement is Essence Food, a company that has combined AI, 3D printing, and advanced freeze-drying techniques to transform surplus produce into nutrient-rich, long-lasting food products.




Essence Food'sCEO and founder Marcio Barradas explaining the concept of his company at a forum. (Instagram: 3dessencefood)

Led by CEO and founder Marcio Barradas, the company is pioneering a data-driven approach to food preservation, proving that cutting-edge technology can turn food loss into opportunity — benefiting both the planet and public health.

During a 2017 TED talk, Barradas highlighted the crucial difference between food loss and food waste. He explained that food loss occurs early in the supply chain, before products reach consumers, while food waste happens at the consumer level.

The consequences of food loss are significant, leading to a drastic reduction in the volume of food available for consumption. Several factors contribute to this issue, including poor yields, quality inconsistencies, spoilage, and inefficiencies in transportation and storage.

One particularly troubling aspect of food loss is the rejection of perfectly edible fruits and vegetables by retailers due to aesthetic imperfections. This practice results in vast quantities of nutritious food being discarded before it ever reaches a plate.




By integrating AI with the freeze-drying process, Essence Food repurposes surplus and rejected produce that might otherwise go to waste. (Supplied)

Reflecting on his TED talk, Barradas told Arab News: “It was a call to the industry to wake up and stop wasting foods when they can actually monetize them. So it was sort of from trash to cash.”

Despite growing awareness of food loss, Barradas observed that as recently as 2019, no large-scale solutions had been implemented to tackle the problem effectively. Determined to change this, he launched Essence Food, a company dedicated to reducing food loss through advanced technology.

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By integrating AI with the freeze-drying process, Essence Food repurposes surplus and rejected produce that might otherwise go to waste. This not only preserves valuable nutrients but also addresses long-term health and environmental concerns associated with food production.

Freeze-drying, unlike other dehydration methods, retains a greater percentage of a food’s original nutrients while significantly improving shelf life and product quality. These advantages make it an ideal technology for tackling food loss on a global scale.

After its initial launch in Spain, Essence Food quickly expanded its footprint in the Middle East, beginning with the UAE and now moving into .




Visitors attend a demo of Essence Food at the Gulfood in Dubai. (Supplied)

“We presented it at Gulfood in Dubai, and amazingly, we won as most innovative startup back in 2019,” said Barradas, referring to the company’s 3D-printed products, which have been showcased at the prestigious food industry event.

“This allowed us to expand very fast in the region and start to see how we can optimize all the resources that exist, knowing there is a region that imports the majority of its fruits and vegetables.

“Encouraged by winning that award at Gulfood, what I saw is that in the Middle East, there is an advantage compared to Europe. It’s less bureaucratic. When the decision-makers here believe in something, they will bring it to the front and it will be implemented.”

Although freeze-drying and 3D printing are not new technologies, AI has revolutionized their efficiency. When Barradas founded Essence Food, the company was already “very proactive with machine learning.

“All our data was being stored and analyzed in terms of accelerating the processes, having better decision-making, and also using that machine-learning capacity to really teach our machines.”




As the company worked to develop a more efficient freeze-dryer, AI emerged as the key to optimizing the technique. (Supplied)

As the company worked to develop a more efficient freeze-dryer, AI emerged as the key to optimizing the technique. “Now, the age of AI came really strong in the last two years. So, what we’re doing is a virtual library,” said Barradas.

Every fruit or vegetable that enters Essence Food’s freeze-drying process undergoes rigorous analysis in a laboratory. Strawberries, bananas, tomatoes, beetroot — each ingredient is tested to determine its precise nutritional content.

The data collected is then fed into a virtual AI library, creating a vast database of nutritional insights. This system allows for an unprecedented level of food customization, tailored to individual dietary needs.

DID YOU KNOW?

• Food loss occurs early in the supply chain, often due to spoilage and market rejection, while food waste happens at the consumer level.

• Preservation techniques, such as freeze-drying and 3D printing, are being optimized with AI to create long-lasting, nutritious products.

• By optimizing food processing at its source, AI is playing a role in reducing emissions and making food production more sustainable.

“Having that library connected now with AI, you can only imagine how we can customize food for each individual.”

Barradas envisions a future where AI-driven food technology plays a direct role in preventive healthcare. Through Essence Food’s new smartphone app, users will be able to personalize their nutrition with nutrient-rich foods, including a healthier take on gummy bears.

“If I connect your mobile device, which you use every day, and it knows your steps and habits, everything is stored there. If you connect to this app that we are launching, you’ll be able to have customized gummy bears for the whole week,” he said.

“So, you’ll take two gummy bears a day, or one gummy bear a day, not to cure any disease, but to prevent you from getting any disease.”




Visitors get a taste of samples of Essence Food products at the Gulfood in Dubai. (Supplied)

He believes that modern diets have led to an over-reliance on supplements and pharmaceuticals. “We are only dealing with the consequences, with the symptoms, but we’re not fighting the causes,” he said.

Beyond nutrition, machine learning is also driving new sustainability initiatives within Essence Food’s freeze-drying technology.

One of the company’s most innovative breakthroughs is the recovery of water from fruits during the drying process. This reclaimed water has the potential to support vertical farming and other water-scarce agricultural initiatives.

“There’s something really amazing in this technology,” said Barradas. “It doesn’t need water, but it brings back water. So, any time you freeze-dry in the machine, it gives you potable water that was inside the fruits.”

The implications of this discovery are particularly relevant for regions like , where water scarcity is a pressing issue.




Some of the dried fresh fruit products of Essence Food. (Instagram: 3dessencefood)

“If we load the machine with 40 kg of strawberries, we will be removing 35 liters, 32 liters, of potable water,” said Barradas.

This water recovery system can be integrated with vertical farming operations, creating a closed-loop system where food loss is minimized and essential resources are conserved.

“We want to create a synergy with vertical farming, where we recover food losses from these vertical farms in the desert, and with the water that we recover, we create more food,” said Barradas.

“Because , being such a vast region, and knowing the region where dates are grown, it will be amazing to bring the technology to the source and not bring the ingredient to Riyadh, for example, to transform it.

“Because the impact of transport and moving fresh ingredients is really big on the planet. We’re looking to go to the source of the ingredient to minimize everything that has to do with CO2 emissions.”


HUMAIN launches ‘groundbreaking’ laptop built around agentic AI

HUMAIN launches ‘groundbreaking’ laptop built around agentic AI
Updated 26 September 2025

HUMAIN launches ‘groundbreaking’ laptop built around agentic AI

HUMAIN launches ‘groundbreaking’ laptop built around agentic AI

RIYADH: HUMAIN, a Public Investment Fund company has announced the launch of its Horizon Pro PC, billed as “a groundbreaking laptop designed to revolutionize agentic artificial intelligence personal computing.” Agentic AI systems can act independently and with initiative with limited, or no, human oversight.

The launch was announced by HUMAIN CEO Tareq Amin during the Snapdragon Summit in Maui, Hawaii.

According to a press release, the Snapdragon processor family at the core of the HUMAIN Horizon Pro deliver “leading AI performance and a powerful CPU so that the PC can operate up to 100 times faster than human thought.”

It added that the company’s upcoming proprietary HUMAIN ONE operating system “enables users to manage enterprise workflows, communications, and AI applications from a unified, adaptive interface designed to anticipate needs and accelerate decision-making.” It added that the new PC “offers zero-latency wake time, over 18 hours of battery life, a 40-percent reduction in power consumption compared to competing systems, and advanced thermal architecture for sustained, high-performance use across demanding environments.”

HUMAIN’s AI integrates the Arabic-first large language model “ALLaM” and “operates locally for maximum speed and data privacy, with the flexibility of hybrid AI to tap into the cloud when complex processing or broader insights are required, offering enterprise users the ideal blend of performance, control, and scale,” according to the company.

Amin said: “The HUMAIN Horizon Pro represents a paradigm shift in agentic AI personal computing, especially for enterprise environments where AI actively collaborates with users, both locally and in the cloud, to boost productivity.”

Amin also announced that HUMAIN will give away 500 of its PCs to students as part of its launch initiative to “help unlock new potential for learning, creativity, and future leadership in AI-driven fields.”


champions youth empowerment at UN

 champions youth empowerment at UN
Updated 26 September 2025

champions youth empowerment at UN

 champions youth empowerment at UN
  • Invest in youth, says Minister Faisal bin Fadel Al-Ibrahim
  • Praise for Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman’s vision

NEW YORK: ’s Economy and Planning Minister Faisal bin Fadel Al-Ibrahim has told world leaders at the 80th UN General Assembly that young people are “key” to ensure the world’s long-term sustainable development.

Al-Ibrahim was speaking during the commemoration of the World Program of Action for Youth which was set up 30 years ago.

“In a world where many struggle to embrace long-term vision, youth remains the key factor,” Al-Ibrahim told the high-level gathering.

“They possess the future more than we ever will. The lessons from our experiences are clear: involve youth, invest in them, and depend on them today.”

Al-Ibrahim highlighted ’s Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman as a prime example of youth-driven leadership, crediting his transformative vision with channeling young people’s energy and ambitions into concrete national progress.

“It is not merely about population size, but about leadership,” Al-Ibrahim explained. He cited Saudi Vision 2030 as “the best model of long-term planning and sustainable implementation.”

The minister noted that while nearly half the world’s population is under 30, youth unemployment remains three times higher than adult joblessness. Millions of young people continue to fall outside formal education, training, and employment frameworks.

Al-Ibrahim warned that collective action would determine whether current demographic trends become “opportunities that bear fruit or burdens that weigh down the entire global system.”


KSrelief host talks on crises in Middle East, Sudan with UN and EU

KSrelief host talks on crises in Middle East, Sudan with UN and EU
Updated 26 September 2025

KSrelief host talks on crises in Middle East, Sudan with UN and EU

KSrelief host talks on crises in Middle East, Sudan with UN and EU
  • Joint action ‘essential,’ says KSrelief’s Dr. Abdullah Al-Rabeeah
  • EU’s Hadja Lahbib emphasizes 305m people need urgent help

NEW YORK: ’s aid agency KSrelief co-hosted a high-level ministerial panel at the UN headquarters this week on the worsening humanitarian crises in the Middle East and Sudan.

KSrelief hosted the event, titled “Humanitarian Diplomacy in Action: Collective Response to the Crises in the Middle East,” with the EU and the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs.

International leaders, experts, and officials from humanitarian organizations discussed ways to deliver lifesaving assistance to millions facing violence, hunger, and limited access to basic services in Gaza, the West Bank, Syria, Yemen, and Sudan.

Participants included the UN World Food Programme, the Norwegian Refugee Council, and the International Committee of the Red Crescent.

Discussions highlighted the urgent need to overcome political and administrative barriers, support frontline aid workers, and secure flexible funding for relief.

The panel focused on how diplomatic efforts could open access, protect civilians, and ensure aid reaches those most in need.

Dr. Abdullah Al-Rabeeah, adviser at the royal court and general supervisor of KSrelief, said: “In times of crisis, humanitarian diplomacy is essential to breaking down barriers and saving lives.

“We must work together, using every tool at our disposal, to reach those who rely on our help. Through partnership and determination, we can bring hope and dignity back to people across the region.”

European Commissioner for Equality, Preparedness and Crisis Management Hadja Lahbib emphasized the scale of the challenge.

“We remain steadfast in our efforts to alleviate the suffering of the most vulnerable around the world. Over 305 million people need humanitarian assistance.

“The humanitarian disasters in Gaza, Syria, Yemen, and Sudan are a stark reminder that much more needs to be done, by all of us, to help civilians suffering the effects of brutal conflicts,” she said.

“Funding itself is not the solution: adequate funding is necessary but so is ensuring effective delivery to the vulnerable. Humanitarians must be allowed to do their work everywhere — this is an imperative of international humanitarian law, and an imperative of our shared humanity.”

Cindy McCain, executive director of the WFP, warned of escalating risks. “With famine gripping Gaza and Sudan, and UN teams arbitrarily detained in Yemen, humanitarians are facing unprecedented risks and challenges as they carry out their lifesaving work.

“We urgently need global leaders to uphold the right to safety and protection for all aid workers, and the obligation on all parties to provide unimpeded humanitarian access.”

Joyce Msuya, assistant secretary-general for humanitarian affairs and deputy emergency relief coordinator at OCHA, said: “Humanitarian diplomacy can secure humanitarian space and yield real, lifesaving outcomes for the people we serve.

“In the Middle East and in Sudan it is not just important — it is indispensable.”

The event closed with the participants resolving to push for practical solutions and more coordinated action to meet the urgent needs of millions across the region.


Saudi foreign affairs minister joins UNGA side meetings

Saudi foreign affairs minister joins UNGA side meetings
Updated 26 September 2025

Saudi foreign affairs minister joins UNGA side meetings

Saudi foreign affairs minister joins UNGA side meetings

RIYADH: Minister of Foreign Affairs Prince Faisal bin Farhan joined a series of meetings on the sidelines of the 80th session of the United Nations General Assembly, including the G20 foreign envoys’ gathering chaired by South Africa.

Prince Faisal stressed the importance of international economic cooperation and the activation of multilateral institutions, foremost among them the UN and the G20, describing them as vital platforms for coordinating efforts to address political and economic challenges, SPA reported, quoting his remarks.

The foreign minister said that addressing global challenges requires genuine international solidarity and multilateral cooperation based on shared responsibility.

“The world today faces rising levels of inequality, global economic disruptions that have deeply impacted millions of lives, escalating regional and international tensions, and repeated violations of international law. All these issues threaten the stability of the international order and hinder the path of sustainable development,” Prince Faisal said.

Prince Faisal also participated in the ministerial-level meeting of the Arab Summit Troika with his South Korean counterpart Cho Hyun, who was also President of the UN Security Council for September.

They discussed ways to coordinate multilateral work to strengthen joint efforts serving regional and international issues during their meeting.

Prince Faisal also met with Deputy Prime Minister and Minister of Foreign Affairs of Luxembourg Xavier Bettel, where they signed a Memorandum of Understanding on political consultations.

They also talked about strategies to further enhance bilateral relations between their countries.


Saudi and Russian climate envoys meet at UNGA

Saudi and Russian climate envoys meet at UNGA
Updated 26 September 2025

Saudi and Russian climate envoys meet at UNGA

Saudi and Russian climate envoys meet at UNGA

NEW YORK: Adel Al-Jubeir, ’s minister of state for foreign affairs and climate envoy, met with Ruslan Edelgeriyev, Russian presidential aide and special representative for climate issues, on the sidelines of the 80th UN General Assembly yesterday. The two discussed environmental issues, climate change and related international efforts.

The two countries are focusing on further boosting their ties. Recently, the Royal Commission for Jubail and Yanbu, represented by Jazan City for Primary and Downstream Industries, conducted a five-day marketing tour to Russia aimed at attracting investment and building partnerships.

Led by JCPDI CEO Hussain Fadhli, the Saudi delegation met with leading Russian companies to showcase the city’s infrastructure, incentives, and competitive advantages.