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Food 4.0

Catalyzing Food Sector Productivity to Bolster Canada’s Global Competitiveness and Economic Resilience

The Challenge Facing Canada

As Canadians face rising grocery costs and food manufacturers struggle to be profitable, business leaders are under pressure to find new ways to grow their food businesses and address key market gaps. Canada’s food sector is dynamic and comprised of innovative companies, big and small, aspiring to become more productive, competitive, and sustainable. Each segment of the industry brings its own exciting opportunities for growth. And at the Canadian Food Innovation Network, we support them all.

While there is a benefit for every size of company to embrace innovation as a key growth strategy, CFIN has identified small and medium-sized food enterprises (SMEs) as a key driver for Canada’s future. By supporting their growth, we can help strengthen our economy, create new jobs, and feed more people in a more sustainable way. 

Canada’s small and medium-sized food businesses are full of potential, but most need more support to embrace innovation. Tight budgets and limited bandwidth prevent leaders in SME food companies from staying abreast of innovation and the high cost of importing foreign equipment and ingredients can make new solutions feel out of reach. Some businesses try to tackle challenges by adding more people, while others dive into implementing new technologies without the right tools or guidance. It’s not that they don’t want to grow and adopt cutting-edge innovation; it just isn’t always seen as accessible or practical for smaller businesses.

The opportunity is clear: innovation isn’t just a good idea, it’s a smart investment. When food businesses are equipped to push boundaries and explore bold ideas, the entire industry thrives. Innovation fuels progress, drives competitiveness, and positions Canada’s food industry to compete globally and build lasting resilience. CFIN wants to make it happen and we want you to be involved!

Strengths & Opportunities

Canada is already a global food powerhouse, ranked 7th in the world for the size of our food and agriculture exports. And momentum is building.

However, Canada currently ranks 11th in global food sector competitiveness, showing there’s a clear opportunity to do better. With our rich resources, skilled talent, and strong entrepreneurial spirit, the pieces are there to leverage the sector as a strategic industrial advantage for Canada’s long-term economic resilience.

  • Ingenuity & Skill

    A surge of innovators are translating research excellence into transformative solutions.

  • Innovation Ecosystem

    Rapid growth in foodtech, supported by expertise in AI, biotech, and advanced manufacturing.

  • Robust Support

    Access to Accelerators, non-dilutive funding, R&D facilities and materials, services, and technical partners.

  • Established SME Base

    Over 4,500 small and medium-sized food processors are driving activity across the food sector

Opportunities Ahead

Connect the Dots

There’s a clear opportunity to better link SMEs, startups, researchers, and service providers to accelerate innovation.

Fuel Growth

Food sector business leaders are actively seeking new growth strategies and are ready to adopt innovative products and solutions that will help them stay competitive, adapt to global trade pressures, and diversify into new markets.

Scale Impact

Canada knows how to build startups, but scaling them successfully is where the gap lies. By supporting collaboration and investment—and by advancing large-scale R&D, commercialization, and technology adoption initiatives—Canada can transform small businesses into economic and global leaders.

The bottom line?

The ingredients for increased  success are already in place; now it’s about combining them with the right recipe to unlock the full economic potential of Canada’s food sector.

What is Industry 4.0?

Industry 4.0 is transforming the way we make and move things. Often called the Fourth Industrial Revolution, this globally embraced goal is all about bringing smart technology into manufacturing and industrial operations.

Think of tools like the Internet of Things (IoT), cloud computing, artificial intelligence, big data, and robotics; working together to make factories and supply chains more connected, efficient, and adaptable. That’s the promise of Industry 4.0.