Abstract

This article asks how the application of digital technologies is changing the organization of the agri-food system in the context of the third food regime. The academic debate on digitalization and food largely focuses on the input and farm level. Yet, based on the analysis of 280 digital services and products, we show that digital technologies are now being used along the entire food commodity chain. We argue that digital technologies in the third food regime serve on the one hand as a continuation of established information and communication technologies, thus deepening certain features of the existing food regime such as the retail sector’s control over global commodity chains. On the other hand, digital technologies also introduce new forms of control and value extraction based on the use of data and pave the way for large tech companies to take over market shares in the agri-food sector. Finally, we find that multinational agri-food companies are starting to take on the business models of leading digital tech companies, for instance by developing digital platforms throughout the agri-food system. We argue that this shows that the broader economic restructuring of neoliberal capitalism towards digital capitalism is also making its way into the agri-food system.

Highlights

  • The digitalization of agriculture is widely hailed as the agricultural revolution that will change how food is produced and consumed (e.g. Trendov et al 2019)

  • Our aim is first to provide a broader picture of the digital technologies that are currently applied in food commodity chains, and secondly to evaluate where digital technologies act as a mere ‘update’ of information and communication technology (ICT), and if and where we can identify potential shifts in the current organization of the agri-food system due to digital technologies

  • Our analysis has shown that the digitalization of food production is a phenomenon along the entire commodity chain

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Summary

Introduction

The digitalization of agriculture is widely hailed as the agricultural revolution that will change how food is produced and consumed (e.g. Trendov et al 2019). Trendov et al 2019) Both political and corporate leaders argue that digitalization offers the solution to feeding a growing world population, while at the same time mitigating the negative environmental and climate consequences of (industrial) agriculture (see Newell and Taylor 2017). Digital agriculture might help farmers to be more precise with inputs by offering information on ecological conditions through precise weather forecasts or sensors scanning the soil (for an overview, see Klerkx et al 2019; Lezoche et al 2020). Farms will be able to reduce labor costs through the use of robotics or (semi-) autonomous machines. This will influence agrarian labor conditions and might lead to job losses in the sector (Carolan 2019). Digital agriculture raises questions of data security and sovereignty as well as farmer autonomy (Fraser 2019; Bronson and Knezevic 2016; Wolfert et al 2017), and might enhance inequalities between farmers (Klerkx and Rose 2020)

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