Agri-Genomics Startup Singrow Opens Indoor R&D Farm, Plots Expansion to Malaysia, Thailand

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Disclosure: AFN’s parent company, AgFunder, is an investor in Singrow.


  • Agri-genomics startup Singrow has opened a new indoor farm in Singapore to serve as its main R&D hub.
  • The R&D hub will develop novel crop varieties using Singrow’s proprietary genomics technology.
  • The Singapore-based company will also expand to Malaysia and Thailand via franchise farm partnerships with TreeGrow Sdn Bhd and PREINO Co, respectively.
  • The partnerships will expand availability of Singrow’s technology as well as its climate-resilient strawberries to climate-impacted regions.
Inside Singrow’s farm. Image credit: Angela Tay/AgFunder

Why it matters

In a speech at the new farm’s opening ceremony this week, Singrow founder, CEO and chief scientist Dr. Bao Shengjie called the new facility “an important milestone” for the company.

Singrow is tackling the challenges of growing food in an age of limited resources and natural disasters (drought, fire, etc.) brought on by climate change. This is especially true in Singapore, where just 1% of the city-state’s land mass is available for farming, and bolstering food security is a major part of the national agenda.

“At Singrow, we believe that science is the answer to these challenges,” said Shengjie.

Singrow’s technology isn’t your average indoor farming system, however. As AgFunder partner Michael Dean has noted in the past, one of the standout elements of the system is its “holistic approach to controlled environment agriculture” that handles every step of the grow process from seed breeding to harvesting.

This is in contrast to most indoor farms, which either use off-the-shelf technology or build software and hardware that only services a part of the operation, such as seeding or harvesting.

Singrow’s approach enables the company to breed crops suited to certain environments (e.g. drought) and automate much of the growing and harvesting tasks later on in the process.

The company made headlines earlier this year for its “climate-resilient strawberries” designed to be grown in tropical climates such as Singapore.

Shengjie said that with the new R&D hub, Singrow will be able apply its agri-genomics technology — which leverages genome sequencing and annotation, and gene adaptation and application — to other crops. Farmers around the world would then be able to produce more climate-resilient crops, thus strengthening food security and their own livelihoods.

“Our proprietary genomics-based farming protocols further allow for these crops to be grown more efficiently,” he said. “In fact, our indoor farming technology is at least 40% more energy-efficient than other indoor farms, allowing us to produce crops in a more sustainable and cost-effective manner.”

Singrow signs the Memorandum of Understanding with TreeGrow Sdn Bhd and PREINO Co., solidifying the partnerships. Image credit: Angela Tay/AgFunder

Beyond Singapore

Singrow has big plans outside Singapore, too.

Onstage at the opening ceremony, Singrow signed agreements with its new franchise farm partners: TreeGrow in Malaysia and PREINO Co. in Thailand. These collaborations will make Singrow’s technology and strawberries available to more farmers, particularly in regions heavily impacted by climate change.

Singrow will also expand into China — a leading strawberry producer — in the near future. The company joined a key tech hub, the China-Singapore Smart Park in Guangzhou, this year and plans to have a seedling production facility at Guangzhou Knowledge City by 2024.

The company’s crop list will expand as well, with Shengjie highlighting rice, corn, sustainable palm oil, and “other staple vegetables” during his speech.

“Our ultimate goal is to bring our technology and crop varieties to more farmers and communities worldwide, particularly in regions where agricultural challenges have been exacerbated by climate changes and natural disasters,” he said. “Through our expansion, we are one step closer to achieving this goal.”

Image credit: Angela Tay/AgFunder

Source: AgFunder News