AgriVision's 2023 stories
What does the future hold? One word sums it up
At AgriVision 2023, food futurologist Dr. Morgaine Gaye talked about the future of food, which is inextricably linked to other trends in society, from culture to taste to fashion. She said one word encapsulates where we’ve been in the last couple of years and where we’re going in the future: belongings.
Dr. Gaye said belongings worked on many different levels. “First, we have too many belongings, things we don’t need and that will be increasingly hard to get rid of. Next, we really want to belong – that became apparent during the pandemic, where we started to understand the power of the interconnectedness with friends and family. And we also have a longing, both for this perfect time in the past, but also for a better future, perhaps something that we can now co-create.” And finally, being: “it’s become super important to have time to just be, to spend time with ourselves.” Dr. Gaye talked about how this word will permeate trends over the next seven years.
She said that 2023 is the first opportunity we’ve had to stop and look back at what happened in 2020, and there will be more revelations based on that. “But 2023 will also bring more disruption; 2026 is when we’ll first start to have a bit of calm stability.” She said this means now is not the time to sit back and wait, but to do what we can to create the future we want to live in.
Some of the trends Dr. Gaye predicts will be important in coming years include:
- Insecurity: We’re seeing this, especially in the younger generations, and it is revealed in massive rebellion and public uprising. “We, as a society, have to let go of old paradigms we've been attached to for many generations, about having the same or better than our neighbours, a job, a spouse, a car, a bigger house. We're going to start seeing people making different choices for a happier, perhaps better and more prosperous life and world,” said Dr. Gaye.
- Comfort: This is manifesting in an era of fluffy, comforting softness across brands, from fashion to food and beyond. Think puffy, soft outerwear or the Japanese pancakes Dr. Gaye says, “are like a hug in the mouth. People are yearning for softness, after spending the last few years in very hard environments.”
- Sustainability: “We’re not in a sustainable time. We have to do something radical and different.” She said people have started to create tribes with their food preferences – such as veganism – and are interested in products with purpose.
- Nature: “Since COVID, when going for a walk felt like a luxury, people want to feel that connection with nature all the time.” She sees this in interiors, design and food – bringing nature inside through indoor countertop gardens and dinnerware made with natural, imperfect shapes. Or submersing ourselves in nature by eating alfresco or paying more to glamp on a rooftop than sleep in a hotel room. Dr. Gaye said we will increasingly understand the inherent intelligence within all of nature and develop a much more holistic idea of the world.
- Texture: This is related to the emphasis on nature and is coming through in food and design – for example, using mycelium (mushroom fibres) for building materials and food.
- Water: Water will be one of the biggest commodities going forward. She predicts people will inquire more about what’s in our water and there will be places where we can get perfectly pure water. And the way we drink water will change; what we do with plastic bottles and how to use less water, for example by putting air in our water through specially made faucets.
- Packaging: “We’ll make vegetable inks as stamps or use the bark from wood-making to create packaging, use cactus to make leather, or recycle and reuse everything from coffee to orange peels.”
- Maximalism: This is related to the excess of “stuff” we all have – and we can see it in design and clothing, where lots of different, vibrant, colourful elements are being put together. “Everyone’s got too much stuff; we can’t avoid it, so let’s see it. It’s not about perfection, it’s about reality,” she said.
- Air: The conversation in 2020 was about air and it continues to be important. In the food industry, air retexturises food and enables manufacturers to use fewer products (think cheese puffs). “We can get creative, using technology and 3D printing to create beautiful shapes and play with food.” She said protein can be made anywhere, just from air – and Silicon Valley is investing in this possibility.
- Kindness: “One of the things we’re going to embrace more than anything is the new commodity of kindness.” She said it will be how governments, organisations and people will be judged. “There is a decline in democracy in every single country in the world. And what we will see from that is this rise of community, of people coming together, over competition.”
- Humanity: Dr. Gaye said we’ll have many conversations about what it means to be human, particularly with the rise of technology and AI, and understand the gut microbiome, the power of the human mind and our DNA more than ever. “This will change everything, how we interact and navigate our lives. We’ll want to be more mobile and live more flexibly, have more time to pause and reflect, and understand our purpose on the planet in a very different way.”
Dr. Gaye summed it up by reiterating that the coming years will be all about belonging. “It's about being. It's about a longing for a future, a different future, and also about belongings and what we do with those. Your good old days are still ahead of you. May you have many of them.”