Loveland Reporter-Herald

State OKS incentives for farm equipment, bioplastic­s

- By Lucas High Bizwest/reporter-herald

Two firms — one a Coloradoba­sed hemp bioplastic­s company and the other a vertical-farming equipment manufactur­er from the United Kingdom — were unanimousl­y approved Thursday by the Colorado Economic Developmen­t Commission for state incentive packages aimed at enticing them to expand into Northern Colorado.

In Larimer County, U.k.-based Intelligen­t Growth Solutions, a company that makes equipment for indoor farming operations, won approval for $2,758,845 in tax credits over eight years to build a North American base of operations that will serve customers in the United States and Canada.

Intelligen­t Growth Solutions was referred to in EDC documents as Project Sprout, however the company’s chief product officer broke with tradition Thursday and introduced himself and his employer.

If IGS accepts Colorado’s incentives offer, the company will be on the hook for creating 114 new jobs at an average annual wage of $98,991. The jobs will include engineers, supply chain, human resources and legal managers, as well as roles in marketing and sales, according to OEDIT.

“As an internatio­nal company, operating our first station in the U.S. is a real challenge,” Ross said. “The local team from Larimer County, from Loveland, from Fort Collins have been fantastic in their support.”

Next door in Weld County, Project Dunia, an otherwise unnamed company described in commission documents as a “Coloradoba­sed manufactur­ing company that produces hemp-based bioplastic­s that are designed for injection molding applicatio­ns and are compostabl­e,” is eyeing a $20 million manufactur­ing facility.

It is the commission’s practice not to identify companies that the Colorado Office of Economic Developmen­t and Internatio­nal Trade is recruiting until incentives are accepted.

Project Dunia has been offered $203,313 in tax credits over eight years.

Should the company accept, it would commit to creating 28 new jobs at an average annual wage of $69,548. Those jobs would be “primarily production workers with some supervisor­s, office roles and a few executive level positions,” according to OEDIT.

“Its long-term plan is to expand across the country with multiple facilities,” OEDIT deputy director and director of global business developmen­t Michelle Hadwiger said of Project Dunia, which could be Denverbase­d Dama Distributi­ng.

Dama makes packaging products for the cannabis industry using hemp-based bioplastic­s, according to its website. A company representa­tive identified by the first name Cole was present, but did not speak, at Thursday’s EDC meeting; the founder and CEO of Dama is named Cole Gibbs.

This article was first published by Bizwest, an independen­t news organizati­on, and is published under a license agreement. © 2022 Bizwest Media LLC.

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