Indoor strawberry grower Oishii closed a $134 million funding round on Wednesday, allowing the company to break into new markets despite challenges facing the once-hot vertical farming sector. New ...
US-based vertical farming company Oishii has opened its new 237,000-square-foot vertical strawberry farm in Phillipsburg, New Jersey. The new plant, named Amatelas Farm, is adjacent to Oishii’s solar ...
After raising $150 million in Series B funding, Jersey City-based sustainable berry grower Oishii will continue to expand into new markets as well as invest in research and development. The vertical ...
Add Yahoo as a preferred source to see more of our stories on Google. Hiroki Koga is the founder of Oishii vertical strawberry farm, where everything from wind speed to temperature is controlled with ...
Oishii, the company behind the world's largest indoor vertical strawberry farm, today announced the first closing of $150 million in Series C financing led by SPARX Asset Management Co., Ltd., with ...
Plant factories are failing, with multiple companies closing or going bankrupt in recent months. This includes the largest vertical farm on the planet, in Compton, Los Angeles. Despite raising over ...
Vertical farming companies must prioritize long-term planning, efficient unit economics and operational consistency to succeed as the industry faces challenges in capital allocation and a likely wave ...
Plenty Unlimited, a San Francisco-based agricultural technology company that counts tech billionaires Jeff Bezos and Eric Schmidt among its investors, has filed for bankruptcy but plans to continue ...
Plenty Unlimited’s US leafy greens indoor farm. Image credit: Facebook Plenty Unlimited plans to build five vertical farms in the UAE in partnership with a local investor to cultivate strawberries.
Vertical farming businesses blossomed a decade ago, promising an abundant, cleaner source of fruits and vegetables. Today, most of those startups have withered. Constructed in opaque buildings like ...
CHESTERFIELD COUNTY, Va. (WRIC) — The company behind Chesterfield County’s newly opened, vertical indoor strawberry farm has filed for bankruptcy. According to court records, Plenty Unlimited, Inc.