
🍓 Dyson — the company famous for vacuum cleaners, hair dryers, and engineering marvels – is stepping into… agriculture. Yes, you heard right. The British firm has unveiled a vertical farming system for growing strawberries all year round.
What’s the project?
On the grounds of Dyson’s UK research campus, they’ve built a futuristic setup for strawberry cultivation – no soil, no rain, no climate tantrums.
The system is AI-powered and includes:
- multi-level growing trays
- targeted lighting systems
- full climate control
- automated irrigation and plant-level data tracking
It looks more like a science lab than a greenhouse, but with berries instead of microchips.
The cost?
These strawberries are 3–5 times more expensive than standard ones – $15 to $30 per kilogram depending on automation and logistics.
Why strawberries, Dyson?
The company says this is part of a global effort to explore food security. With climate change, shrinking farmland and a growing population, someone has to reinvent agri-tech. Dyson says: why not us?
💬 James Dyson:
“Engineering isn’t just about tech – it’s about solving real problems. And food is problem number one.”
Why does it matter?
- Farming is going smart -no more tractors or acres needed
- Dyson is testing methods that could scale to other crops
- It might reshape agriculture like Tesla did with transportation
💡 The moral?
Hi-tech isn’t just for rockets anymore – it’s in your fruit bowl. Dyson shows that strawberries can be just as futuristic as a cyclone vacuum. And tomorrow’s breakfast might just be grown in a tower with sensors.
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