Top 10 AI Agriculture & Food Companies — Q2 2025

By Neural Capital Labs
Top 10 AI Agriculture & Food Companies — Q2 2025

State of the Sector: Q2 2025 Overview

AI is taking root in agriculture — not as a novelty, but as a necessity. In Q2 2025, climate volatility, supply chain fragility, and labor shortages drove record adoption of AI tools across the food ecosystem. From precision planting and autonomous harvesting to real-time supply optimization and predictive crop modeling, AI is enabling farms and food systems to become more productive, efficient, and resilient. The big story? Agriculture is moving from reactive to proactive — and AI is the engine behind it.

Top 10 Public AI Agriculture & Food Companies — Q2 2025

1. Deere & Company (DE, NYSE)
John Deere continues to define AI-powered farming. Q2 saw wider deployment of its See & Spray technology, which uses computer vision to target weeds with pinpoint precision — dramatically reducing herbicide use. With autonomous tractors rolling out, Deere is becoming the Tesla of agtech.

2. Corteva Agriscience (CTVA, NYSE)
Corteva is integrating AI across seed genetics, weather modeling, and crop protection. In Q2, its AI-driven trait prediction platform helped farmers select hybrids based on soil conditions, yield goals, and climate forecasts — a step toward hyper-personalized agriculture.

3. Trimble (TRMB, NASDAQ)
Trimble’s AI-enabled precision ag tools are gaining market share, particularly in GPS-guided planting and variable-rate application. Q2 included the release of a new analytics platform that turns multispectral drone imagery into in-season crop health alerts — putting actionable data in farmers’ hands faster.

4. Tyson Foods (TSN, NYSE)
On the food systems side, Tyson is using AI for supply chain forecasting, yield optimization, and food safety monitoring. Q2 featured deeper AI integration into processing lines, where computer vision now tracks meat quality and safety compliance in real time.

5. CNH Industrial (CNHI, NYSE)
Makers of Case IH and New Holland, CNH is leaning into autonomy. Q2 brought new pilot programs for self-driving harvesters and AI-enhanced soil sensors. It’s positioning itself as Deere’s top rival in intelligent farming systems.

6. AGCO Corporation (AGCO, NYSE)
AGCO’s Fendt and Precision Planting lines are now backed by AI for path planning, seeding optimization, and live field condition mapping. Q2 featured strong uptake in North America and Brazil, where labor shortages are pushing autonomy to the forefront.

7. Archer Daniels Midland (ADM, NYSE)
ADM is embedding AI in commodity trading, logistics, and sustainability reporting. Q2 included the rollout of AI-based emissions tracking across its supply chain and improved real-time demand forecasting in its grain origination operations.

8. Nutrien (NTR, NYSE)
As the world’s largest ag retailer, Nutrien is deploying AI to guide fertilizer application, optimize retail delivery, and reduce environmental impact. Q2 saw expanded use of its digital platform, which uses satellite data and local agronomy to generate precision recs for farmers.

9. Bunge (BG, NYSE)
Bunge is using AI for global food logistics — optimizing routes, reducing spoilage, and managing geopolitical supply risk. In Q2, its AI-powered risk modeling system flagged shipment vulnerabilities weeks ahead of competitors, helping them avoid costly delays during port closures in Southeast Asia.

10. AppHarvest (APPH, NASDAQ)
Despite past volatility, AppHarvest’s AI-enabled greenhouses are gaining attention. Q2 showed improved yields thanks to vision-based crop monitoring and climate control. As controlled environment agriculture scales, their tech stack could become a template for future-proof food production.

Private Companies to Watch

Many of the most radical agri-AI innovations are being built in private labs and field trials:

Regrow – Satellite-powered AI platform for monitoring regenerative ag practices and soil health.

Plenty – AI-controlled vertical farms that optimize light, water, and nutrients in real time.

FarmWise – Autonomous weeding and precision spraying robots that reduce chemical use and labor costs.

Taranis – Combines drone imagery with AI to identify pest outbreaks, nutrient stress, and disease before they spread.

Agreena – AI-powered carbon tracking and certification for sustainable farming practices in Europe.

Neural Capital Insight

AI is transforming agriculture from intuition to insight. In Q2, the winners weren’t just making farms smarter — they were connecting the entire food chain, from soil to shelf. Whether it’s modeling nitrogen runoff or forecasting supply shocks, AI is becoming the most valuable tool in the shed.

Get Educated - Get Smart - Be Ready

From AI tractors to predictive supply chains, agriculture is getting intelligent. Follow NeuralCapital.ai for quarterly insights into how AI is transforming food systems — and which companies are leading the way. Q3 Rankings drop July 1.

Disclosure: This article is editorial and not sponsored by any companies mentioned. The views expressed in this article are those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the official policy or position of NeuralCapital.ai.