Press Releases
Kaiima Named One of MIT Technology Review’s 50 Smartest Companies
Kaiima and BioFields Unite to Form BioKaiima to Commercialize Castor Hybrid Seeds in Mexico
Kaiima and BASF Announce Trait Development Collaboration
Kaiima and Beck's Announce Strategic Corn Collaboration
Dr. Mark Messmer Appointed to Board
Kaiima and Horizon Ag Announce their Collaboration
Kaiima Announces the Growth and Expansion of its US Operations
Kaiima Announces Appointment of Richard Greubel as CEO, Dr. Doron Gal to Continue as President
Bayer CropScience and Kaiima partner to improve rice productivity
Kaiima and Keteng to Commercialize High-Yielding EP™ Corn Varieties
Kaiima establishes U.S. office
Kaiima Named One of MIT Technology Review’s 50 Smartest Companies
Kaiima closes financing round of more than $65 million
Kaiima named as a Global Cleantech 100 company
Saaten‐Union and Kaiima join forces for creating a new generation of hybrid wheat varieties
Feb 26, 2014
Moshav Sharona, Israel
Kaiima Bio-Agritech, an innovative Israel-based seed and breeding-technology company, has been named as one of the 50 Smartest Companies in 2014 by MIT Technology Review. The publication’s annual list features the world’s most innovative technology companies.
Kaiima was selected to the 50 Smartest Companies List for developing a pioneering, non-GMO technology platform called Enhanced Ploidy (EP™). EP™, coupled with advanced breeding programs, boosts the inherent productivity and resource usage efficiency of high-impact food and energy crops. Using the same amount of water and land, farmers can now grow plants that produce a greater supply of food and energy.
“At times it seems impossible to keep pace with important emerging technologies,” stated Jason Pontin, publisher and editor in chief of MIT Technology Review. “This issue celebrates organizations at the forefront, displaying ‘disruptive innovation’ that will prove to surpass the competition, transform an industry, and change our lives. Many kinds of agricultural breakthroughs will be needed if we are to feed 9 billion people in the coming decades. Kaiima’s technology is intriguing because of the way it could improve the yield of crops without genetic modification.”
Dr. Doron Gal, Kaiima’s CEO said, “It is an honor and a privilege to be recognized by the MIT Technology Review. And, we are equally proud of the reason why we have been included on this very prestigious list. Kaiima is part of a world effort to help solve global hunger. It is a monumental task that in order to succeed requires the dedicated work and talent of many leading experts and international organizations, all which share a deep interest in creating a better tomorrow. We believe that our proprietary, non-GMO, EP™ technology platform holds an important key to sustainability and meeting the increasing demand for food worldwide.”
The honorees are nominated by MIT Technology Review’s editors, who look for companies that have demonstrated original and valuable technology over the last year, are bringing that technology to market at significant scale, and are clearly influencing their competitors. The companies on the list represent the disruptive innovations most likely to change our lives.
Kaiima and the other honorees will be featured in the March/April edition of MIT Technology Review, published online today and available on newsstands worldwide starting March 4.
About MIT Technology Review
MIT Technology Review leads the global conversation about technologies that matter. An independent media company owned by MIT, it produces publications read by millions of business leaders, innovators, and thought leaders around the globe, in six languages and on a variety of platforms. The company publishes MIT Technology Review, the world′s most respected technology magazine; daily news features, analysis, and opinion; and Business Reports, which explain how technologies are transforming industries.