U.S. indoor farming startup Plenty eyes rollout in
China, Japan: CEO
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[January 17, 2018]
By Dominique Patton
BEIJING (Reuters) - Ambitious U.S. indoor
farming startup Plenty Inc is seeking urban sites for new farms in
Chinese cities as part of a global drive to set up high-tech facilities
growing organic vegetables in warehouses under banks of LED lights.
Matt Barnard, chief executive of the San Francisco-based firm which
counts Amazon Inc. <AMZN.O> founder Jeff Bezos and Japanese tech player
SoftBank Corp <9984.T> among its backers, told Reuters on Wednesday that
China could potentially host at least 300 of Plenty's farms.
Plenty is currently hiring in China and scouting for locations and
distributors in Beijing, Shanghai and Shenzhen, Barnard said in an
interview in Beijing. The company has already hired a team in Japan and
has "locked down" a few farm sites there, according to Barnard, also a
co-founder.
He did not disclose financial or investment targets for the expansion of
the firm which currently operates just one farm, in San Francisco, with
another due to open in Seattle in the first-half of 2018.
"We see a massive opportunity to get people product that tastes better
and also has health and safety that far surpasses anything on the market
today," Barnard said.
Plenty's farming model means growing vegetables and herbs on vertical
towers indoors, with hydroponic systems delivering nutrients to plants
and LED lighting designed to stimulate rapid growth all-year round.
Enclosed farms reduce pests and allow the firm to optimise growing
conditions.
That could be a big draw in China, which has less than a third of the
arable land per person compared with the United States, and in many
places, soil contaminated by heavy metals and pesticides.
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Matt Barnard, Chief Executive Officer of U.S.-based vertical farming
start-up Plenty, poses for a picture in Beijing, China January 17,
2018. REUTERS/Jason Lee
A Plenty farm is designed to be 3 to 10 acres (1.2 to 4 hectares), and can
produce between 150 and 350 times the output of a field farm, said Barnard.
Concerns among Chinese consumers over food safety are also a major opportunity.
Chinese farms will be accompanied by 'experience centres' where people can taste
the product and see how it is produced.
"It's super important that people can trust it," added Barnard, who expects the
China market to contribute 25 to 50 percent of the firm's business in the
future.
The company is talking to restaurants, online grocers and some supermarkets to
distribute the product, which will be priced higher than much of the produce
available in Chinese markets.
Indoor farms can be located close to cities, cutting out the transport from
field to supermarket that impacts the freshness of produce. That allows Plenty
to grow varieties for their flavour and not for their ability to withstand
transport.
One potential concern for Barnard is the cost of operating the lighting systems.
"China power prices are more expensive than in California," he said, adding that
as long as farms are located in places with the best rates farms can still be
successful.
(Reporting by Dominique Patton; Editing by Kenneth Maxwell and Christian
Schmollinger)
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