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The Jerusalem Post: Business and Innovation

What are the top Israel tech trends for 2023? - opinion

 
 AT OURCROWD’S Global Investor Summit. (photo credit: TOMER FOLTYN)
AT OURCROWD’S Global Investor Summit.
(photo credit: TOMER FOLTYN)

OurCrowd's Global Investor Summit in Jerusalem always predicts the top tech trends for the next year. What should we look forward to in 2023?

I look forward every year to when Stav Erez and Eli Nir, partners at OurCrowd, take to the stage in Jerusalem at the venture capital crowdfunding platform’s Global Investor Summit to present their predictions for the top tech trends of the next 12 months.

So, what can we expect to come our way in 2023?

1. Fusion gets 150 million degrees hot.

The announcement by the National Ignition Facility at California’s Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory that it had achieved a breakthrough in producing nuclear fusion ignited a power generation frenzy that has reached Israel.

The Energy Ministry recently pledged $11.5 million to establish a national nuclear fusion institute. The funding will include NT-Tao, a local start-up developing a compact system for nuclear fusion. Unlike fission power plants, with fusion there are no radioactive elements left over.

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2. Space is becoming crowded.

That’s both a nod to the fact that space junk is increasingly clogging up the pathways from the Earth, as well as the strong interest by investors in space tech.

 AT OURCROWD’S Global Investor Summit, SavorEat was giving samples of its 3D-printed plant-based burgers. (credit: TOMER FOLTYN)
AT OURCROWD’S Global Investor Summit, SavorEat was giving samples of its 3D-printed plant-based burgers. (credit: TOMER FOLTYN)

Israeli start-ups of note include Helios, which is creating a system to mine minerals on the moon; SpacePharma, which is developing drugs in zero gravity; and cSpace, which is mounting telescopes on nanosatellites.

3. Innovation puts equity into healthcare.

Israel’s prowess in medical devices and technology is well known as are the benefits of our national HMO system which enables researchers to access robust, anonymized databases. All of this promises an equitable future, where anyone can access top-quality healthcare anywhere at any time.

Among the Israeli start-ups in the field are Feelbetter, which can identify patients at risk for a range of diseases; and Tunefork, which employs smartphones to conduct home hearing tests.


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4. The carbon rush is on.

Erez and Nir were referring here to the rush to decarbonize the atmosphere to forestall the worst effects of climate change.

Among the Israeli start-ups leading this sphere are BlueGreen Water Technologies, which says it has used its water-based carbon removal tech to remove some 3.3 million tons of carbon from the air; H2Pro, which uses a new form of electrolysis to create nonpolluting “green hydrogen”; and Luminscent, which has developed a method to capture “waste heat” from large industrial plants.

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5. Foodtech parity is on its way.

Plant-based alternatives to meat are already becoming mainstream. Lab-grown cultured meat is on its way, too. But to really take off, they must taste good.

Fortunately, some of the food-tech innovations on display at the OurCrowd Summit were truly scrumptious. SavorEat was giving tastes of its 3D-printed plant-based burgers, while DouxMatok’s Incredo Sugar is real sugar but with 30% to 50% less sweetener. I had a muffin with Incredo-made “Nutella” – it was even better than the “regular” peanut butter chocolate squares at a nearby table.

6. The next frontier in energy is storage.

It’s one thing to find new ways to produce energy. But how do you store it, especially if it’s from a renewable source like the sun, which winks out every evening at dusk?

The usual answer: batteries. Indeed, Ford says that its new electric F-150 Lightning’s batteries can power a house for up to three days. Israeli start-up Addionics is developing batteries for electric cars, which it says can store twice the amount of energy as is traditional.

Beyond batteries, Quidnet aims to stash excess energy in pressurized water buried in between layers of rock in the ground.

7. The era of specialized silicon has arrived.

One of the bottlenecks that the COVID-19 pandemic unmasked was serious problems with the global supply chain. With ship crews, truck drivers and dockworkers stuck in quarantine, the normally steady supply of semiconductors slowed, resulting in long delays for everything from computers to new cars.

That has opened an opportunity for what Erez and Nir dubbed “bespoke silicon.” An example: Israeli firm Hailo is developing its own AI processing chip to work with “edge devices” – hardware like a router or switch that controls data flow at the boundary between two networks.

8. Generative AI – a virtual breakthrough.

ChatGPT, the new conversational AI tool that’s now being bundled into Microsoft’s Bing search engine, and Google’s upcoming alternative, Bard, have captured the world’s imagination in just a few short months.

While there are pitfalls to the technology – Bing repeatedly told New York Times tech analyst Kevin Roose to leave his wife – the future will clearly be even more computer-mediated than it is today. The tech is not usually so confrontational.

Israeli start-up D-ID, for example, enables customers to create custom videos with talking avatars “with the touch of a button.”

9. The metaverse – is it game on or game over?

Facebook is so convinced that the metaverse will be the next big thing, it even changed its corporate moniker to Meta.

It’s not all fun and games, though. Surgical Theater allows physicians to visualize operations better via the metaverse. Its augmented reality application renders text and data over the live image of a patient’s anatomy so a physician wearing a Surgical Theater headset never needs to take his or her eyes off the surgical site.

10. We need a trillion new trees.

Trees are a crucial component to combating climate change. However, over the last century, half of all the forests on the planet have either been chopped down or devastated by wildfires. The Earth loses an average of 20 billion trees every year.

Nir and Erez pointed to the OurCrowd-backed Flash Forest, which aims to use drones and its unique “seedpod” technology – containing water-retention additives, beneficial bacteria and fungi, minerals and nutrients – to plant a billion trees by 2028.

The writer’s book TOTALED: The Billion-Dollar Crash of the Startup that Took on Big Auto, Big Oil and the World is available on Amazon and other online booksellers. brianblum.com

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