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Monday 10 June 2019 11:29 am

Ocado pumps £17m into vertical farming joint venture

By: James Warrington

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BRISTOL, UNITED KINGDOM - AUGUST 11: In this photo illustration a laptop displays the Ocado website on August 11, 2014 in Bristol, United Kingdom. This week marks the 20th anniversary of the first online sale. Since that sale - a copy of an album by the artist Sting - online retailing has grown to such an extent that it is now claimed that 95 percent of the UK population has shopped online and close to one in four deciding to shop online each week. (Photo Illustration by Matt Cardy/Getty Images)
The investment marks Ocado's latest expansion into technology

Online grocer Ocado has invested £17m in the emerging vertical farming industry as it looks to bolster its technology offering.

Vertical farming involves the production of food in indoor facilities, where crops are grown on a series of levels in a controlled environment.

Read more: Ocado set to cut 400 jobs as it looks to rebuild Andover warehouse

Ocado said the technique has clear sustainability advantages, including low wastage, low water use and no pesticides.

The firm said the investment could pave the way for a service where vegetables are harvested hours before they are packed.

“We believe that our investments today in vertical farming will allow us to address fundamental consumer concerns on freshness and sustainability and build on new technologies that will revolutionise the way customers access fresh produce,” said chief executive Tim Steiner.

Ocado said it has formed a joint venture called Infinite Acres with Dutch industrial systems provider Priva and US vertical farming firm 80 Acres.

Read more

Ocado to replace founder Steiner as shares plunge 

Ocado and Openreach lead push against Congestion charge for electric vans

The online grocer has also bought a 58 per cent stake in Scunthrpe-based Jones Food Company (JFC), which is Europe’s largest operating vertical farm.

JFC currently produces leafy greens and herbs for UK customers, with its capacity expected to grow to 420 tonnes per year.

The investment marks Ocado’s latest expansion into technology, which is the driving force behind its grocery operations.

Read more: Waitrose sets out £1bn online shopping plan as it prepares for life without Ocado

Last month the firm led a £7m seed round for UK robotics firm Karakuri, which produces systems that create personalised meals to fit customer requirements.

Shares in Ocado rose almost 3.5 per cent following the announcement.

Read more

Mark Kleinman: Share price slump moves Steiner closer to Ocado checkout 

Mark Kleinman is Sky News' City Editor and writes a column for City PM

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