£5.4m funding boost for Scottish 'vertical farm' firm

IGS IGS vertical farmIGS
The firm opened its demonstration centre in Invergowrie last year

The Perth and Kinross-based firm behind Scotland's first "vertical farm" has received £5.4m funding to grow its business.

Intelligent Growth Solutions (IGS) said it had received "significant interest" since opening its demonstration facility in Invergowrie last year.

It said the funding would allow it to create jobs and increase development.

The "vertical farm" aims to create an efficient and waste-free method of growing.

The funding has been received from agri-tech food investor S2G, online venture capital firm AgFunder, and the Scottish Investment Bank.

IGS vertical farm
Basil can be grown in just 20 days in the vertical farm

IGS says it supplies "highly-sophisticated" vertical farming technology to indoor farms to enable the "efficient production of food in any location around the world".

The trial centre is housed in a two-storey white building at the James Hutton Institute.

Researchers have experimented with different colours of light and have managed to reduce the growing time of trial herbs by about half.

David Farquhar, chief executive of Intelligent Growth Solutions, said the industry "is just at the starting line".

He said: "We look forward to working with our customers, partners and colleagues at the James Hutton Institute to enable the highest quality produce to be grown at economically viable prices and help feed the burgeoning global population."