The Courier & Advertiser (Fife Edition)

UK’s first commercial­ly viable vertical farm being assembled

INDOOR: Farm expected to be growing salad leaves and herbs before year is out

- Nancy nicolson farming ediTor nnicolson@thecourier.co.uk

An indoor farm being built on the outskirts of Dundee is expected to be growing salad leaves and herbs by the end of the year

The futuristic constructi­on nearing completion at the James Hutton Institute (JHI) at Invergowri­e will be the UK’s first commercial­ly viable vertical farm.

It is being built by Intelligen­t Growth Solutions, (IGS) in collaborat­ion with global automation business, Omron.

The company has just closed its base at Guardbridg­e where it was working on prototype models which involved combining efficient smart lighting with automation and power to grow fresh produce in vertical towers.

IGS chief executive Henry Aykroyd said the Guardbridg­e project had led to strong relationsh­ips with local universiti­es and scientists at JHI who aimed to improve the plant science involved with this technology.

“Vertical farming allows us to provide the exact environmen­tal conditions necessary for optimal plant growth,” he said.

“By adopting the principles of Total Controlled Environmen­t Agricultur­e (TCEA), a system in which all aspects of the growing environmen­t can be controlled, it is possible to eliminate variations in the growing environmen­t, enabling the grower to produce consistent, high quality crops with minimal wastage, in any location, all year round.”

The company will initially be growing salad leaves and herbs and the long-term goal is to grow a higher volume of lower value products such as tomatoes and cucumbers.

IGS then aims to roll out the technology and create other vertical farms across the country.

Food will be grown in a stacking system with LED lighting, and nutrition will come via hydroponic­s.

Mr Aykroyd said automation, energy reduction technology and advanced biological research would be the three key pillars to success.

He added: “Partnering with two leading experts, Omron and the James Hutton Institute, to deliver this provides the very best opportunit­y for a new approach to vertical farming.”

JHI chief executive Professor Colin Campbell said: “This initiative combines our world-leading knowledge of plant science at the James Hutton Institute and IGS’ entreprene­urship to develop efficient ways of growing plants on a small footprint with low energy and water input.”

 ??  ?? The indoor farm is being built by Intelligen­t Growth Solutions in collaborat­ion with global automation business Omron.
The indoor farm is being built by Intelligen­t Growth Solutions in collaborat­ion with global automation business Omron.

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