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Gardin raises $12M Series A for photosynthesis-sensing AI…

The UK-based startup's sensor-plus-AI stack measures plant photosynthetic efficiency in real time, giving growers a 14% yield uplift in controlled-environment trials.

Gardin raises $12M Series A for photosynthesis-sensing AI… — AixPoint Dirk Vandenhirtz, founder of AixPoint and AgTech advisor based in Aachen

Gardin raises $12M Series A for photosynthesis-sensing AI platform in greenhouses

The UK-based startup's sensor-plus-AI stack measures plant photosynthetic efficiency in real time, giving growers a 14% yield uplift in controlled-environment trials.

· CEA / Vertical Farming · Europe · 4 min

Gardin Agritech has closed a $12M Series A led by Navus Ventures, with participation from Oxford Innovation Finance and Yield Lab Europe. The round follows a $4.5M seed in 2025 and will fund scaling its photosynthesis-sensing platform across 200 greenhouse operations in the UK and Netherlands.

The core technology combines a proprietary chlorophyll-fluorescence sensor with a cloud-based AI model that correlates photosynthetic activity to stress signals — nutrient deficiency, pathogen onset, light saturation — up to 72 hours before visual symptoms appear. In peer-reviewed trials at Wageningen UR, tomato growers using the system achieved a 14% yield increase with 11% lower energy costs.

The business model is SaaS: growers pay £0.08 per m² per month for sensor data and decision-support alerts. At 200 facilities averaging 4 hectares each, Gardin's ARR runway sits at £7.7M, making the $12M raise roughly 1.5× forward revenue — attractive by current AgTech standards.

Gardin's competitive moat is the sensor itself: most greenhouse AI platforms rely on off-the-shelf environmental sensors (temperature, humidity, CO₂) as proxies for plant health. By measuring photosynthesis directly, Gardin captures a physiological signal that is both earlier and more specific.

The round also funds a new R&D line for vertical farms, where LED spectrum tuning based on real-time photosynthetic feedback could cut electricity spend by 18–22%, per internal estimates. Pilot agreements with Infarm and Plenty are expected in Q4 2026.

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