InvertiGro is showing how advanced technology can transform agriculture, delivering scalable indoor farms that combine efficiency, flexibility and commercial viability. Since winning the Australian Technologies Competition (ATC) Supply Chain Resilience Award in 2022, the company has installed nine customer farms across Australia and overseas, from Sydney, Brisbane and Perth to the UK and Saudi Arabia, with a tenth farm scheduled for Darwin in November.
These projects span industries including research and education, food wholesaling, forestry nurseries and even one of the world's largest giga-projects. Together, they demonstrate what InvertiGro calls its "product-customer fit": systems that can adapt to different applications while proving their commercial potential in markets where other indoor farming ventures have struggled.
At the heart of InvertiGro's offering is its modular, plug-and-play technology supported by a suite of services from farm design to "farming as a service." Proprietary software powered by artificial intelligence, machine learning and a soon-to-be-released mobile app is making the systems increasingly efficient and easy to use. Recent refinements have expanded the range of crops supported to include seedlings, cannabis, mushrooms and native plants, broadening the company's addressable market, which it estimates could exceed USD50 billion by 2030.
Distribution and manufacturing partnerships in Australia, the UK, the Caribbean and Saudi Arabia are extending reach and reducing reliance on single markets. With a growing pipeline of sales discussions across multiple industries, InvertiGro projects revenues to surpass 70 million by the end of 2027.
Read more at Business News Australia