
Bloomberg
Members of the Walton family, heirs to the Wal-Mart Stores Inc. fortune, are backing a startup that thinks it can turn a profit by reducing food waste.
The business, called FoodMaven, has completed an $8.6 million
Series A fundraising round that includes financing from the billionaire Walton clan.
The family office is Walton Enterprises, which holds nearly half of Wal-Mart’s stock.
The Colorado-based startup, which went live in July 2016, is creating a marketplace to find buyers for food that has been rejected by retailers, for any number of reasons, but is still good to eat. An estimated $200 billion worth of food is wasted in the US each year—largely the result of a food system this is inflexible, according to Patrick Bultema, chief executive officer of the company.
“The industry has accepted waste as a cost of doing business†he said. “We’re making pathways that don’t exist in the food system.â€
FoodMaven currently has about 700 customers in Colorado, including restaurants, hospitals and large institutional cafeterias. The company, which expects to do about $10 million in revenue this year, buys products at a discount—say, a palette of frozen pizzas with a mistake on the box, excess chicken that a supermarket chain doesn’t need, or heads of lettuce that got rejected for cosmetic reasons—and then finds buyers for the food.
If they can’t locate a buyer, the food is donated.
Walter Robb, former co-CEO of Whole Foods, joined the board of the startup last year.
Wal-Mart, based in Bentonville, Arkansas, has been working to reduce its food waste. The company is the largest seller of groceries in the US.