While world agricultural supply chains are subject to increasing pressure to combine productivity and sustainability, Doktar offers an integrated digital infrastructure capable of aligning agronomic, environmental sobriety and traceability.
The Doktar model is based on a technological triptych composed of the IoT -embedded on operations, a decision -making software layer, and a traceability platform called CSI (Climate Sustainability Impact). The whole thing aims to cover the entire agricultural value chain, from the plot to the agro-industrial buyer, by providing usable data, environmental performance indicators, and concrete evidence of sustainable practices.
“What Doktar brings is an ability to industrialize sustainability, with a Plug-And-Play approach. Regenerative agriculture is no longer a concept, it becomes measurable, traceable and operable on a scale, ”summarizes an observer in the sector.
The company already operates in more than ten countries, with relays in Türkiye and a base in Amsterdam. It claims the support of six of the ten largest global agrifood groups, which are based on its technology to achieve their climate objectives by 2030. It is a total of 250,000 hectares of agricultural land which are now managed via its platform, on various crops and geographies.
The Dutch company, founded in 2017, today announces a fundraising of 7.5 million euros to accelerate the global deployment of its platform. “We believe that Doktar has a unique position to help farmers and agrifood companies make smarter choices in terms of efficiency and impact,” said Rogier Pieterse, partner at Pymwymic, one of the investors of the Tour. “They allow regenerative agriculture on a scale with concrete applicability,” adds Isabelle Laurencin, associated with the European Circular Bioeconomy Fund (ECBF). The fund, a pioneer of venture capital Bioeconomy in Europe, co-directed the operation with Pymwymic, alongside the historic partner Diffusion Capital Partners.
Doktar now plans to strengthen its presence in Europe, North America and South America, while expanding the capacities of its platform to meet the growing demand for digital tools in the agricultural sector. “This investment marks an essential step in our desire to digitally transform agriculture on a large scale. We are strengthening the digital framework which allows you to have a measurable and verifiable impact on all value chains, ”declare Tanzer Bilgen and Selim Ucer, co -founders of Doktar.