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EBLA Ventures Backs Syrian Agri-Tech Nutra-GreeniX with $200K Investment

Mohammed Fathy
Mohammed Fathy

2 min

Syrian agri‑tech startup Nutra‑GreeniX raised $200,000, led by EBLA Ventures with regional backers.

The funding will help scale operations, boost production, and develop technologies for local demand.

Plans include expanding teams and services for farmers and livestock breeders across Syria.

The business targets “sustainable, nutrition‑focused solutions” using clean energy and eco‑friendly methods.

EBLA’s backing reflects early, high‑risk support for Syrian founders solving practical problems.

Syrian agri‑tech startup Nutra‑GreeniX has closed a $200,000 funding round, with EBLA Ventures leading the investment alongside a group of Syrian and Saudi backers. It’s not a headline-grabbing mega round, but in this market, every sensible cheque counts, and this one feels pretty spot on.

The fresh capital is set to go towards scaling operations, boosting production capacity, and developing new technologies tailored to local demand. Nutra‑GreeniX is also planning to grow its team and expand services for farmers and livestock breeders across different parts of Syria. That’s no small task, and anyone who’s spent time around agri‑business in the region knows it can be a bit of a faff to scale while keeping costs under control.

The company’s wider ambition is to strengthen Syria’s livestock sector using sustainable, nutrition‑focused solutions. Its model leans on clean energy and environmentally friendly farming methods, a detail that stands out. I’ve seen plenty of startups talk about sustainability in broad strokes, but this one seems grounded in the day‑to‑day realities of animal feed and agricultural inputs… well, you know?

That said, I reckon the strategic angle of this round matters just as much as the dollar figure. EBLA Ventures has been building a reputation for early, high‑risk bets on Syrian founders, with a clear aim of connecting local and global capital to on‑the‑ground opportunities inside the country. On the flip side, early‑stage investing in fragile markets is not for the faint‑hearted, and I’m not a fan of painting it as an easy win.

From an Arageek reader’s point of view, this deal taps into something familiar: founders quietly getting on with it, improving production, hiring locally, and trying to fix real problems rather than chasing shiny valuations. Believe it or not, those are often the stories that age best—even if the spelling of “definately” doesn’t.

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