Saturday, June 21, 2025
  • About Us
  • Advertise
  • Careers
  • Contact
GREENHOUSE NEWS
  • Home
  • Greenhouse
  • Cultivation
  • Equipment
  • Company
  • Marketing
No Result
View All Result
GREENHOUSE NEWS
Home Climate (meteo)

$6.4 million boost for cool climate horticulture growers

Tatka Petkova by Tatka Petkova
October 1, 2022
in Climate (meteo), Cultivation
0

Scientists are giving Aussie horticulture growers in cooler climates the opportunity to participate in a $6.4M research trial program to help industry adapt to climate change.

Being delivered through Hort Innovation and led and co-funded by the Tasmanian Institute of Agriculture (TIA), with support from national and international industry partners, the five-year project aims to grow cool climate horticulture production by 20 per cent.

Related posts

Russian Scientists Boost Radish Yields by 20% with Innovative Bio-Organic Fertilizer

June 7, 2025

Thrips parvispinus: Emerging Threat to Michigan Greenhouses – Latest Research and Management Strategies

June 5, 2025

Trial sites are being set up in Tasmania, and the research team will design experiments to be relevant across cool climate regions such as south-west Western Australia, the Adelaide Hills, South-East Victoria and high-altitude areas of New South Wales and South-East Queensland.

Hort Innovation Chief Executive Officer Brett Fifield said the aim is to investigate what operational adjustments need to be made to farms in various regions to achieve maximum productivity in the face of unpredictable weather patterns.

“This project is all about getting growers the best possible production outcomes,” he said.

“Researchers will look at fragile soil management, nutrient and water use. High-yield plants that can be picked early to maximise returns, and establishing protected cropping environments that offer stable, pest and disease-controlled growing environments are further priorities.”

The program will span various sectors, including peas, potato, pyrethrum, vegetable seed, cherry and berry production. Co-investing industry partners are Bejo, Potatoes NZ, Simplot, Premium Fresh, Scottish Society for Crop Research, Botanical Resources Australia, Reid Fruits, Hansen Orchards, Costa Group, Driscoll’s Australia, South Pacific Seeds and Fruit Growers Tasmania and contributions from the Australian Government.

TIA Horticulture Centre Leader, Dr Nigel Swarts, said primary producers across the horticultural sector are partnering to address the critical issues and risks associated with climatic variability and extremes in temperature and rainfall.

“With climate change, we can expect heat stress causing irregular yields for peas and potatoes. For fruit crops like cherries, there is the threat of premature ripening and projected increases in pest populations. Nutritional quality in terms of sugars, acids, or antioxidant capacity will also shift, impacting fruit quality outcomes,” he said.

“It is vital that we undertake this research now to give growers the knowledge, tools, and confidence to invest and sustainably expand into the future.

“Our industry partners are integral members of the team who will help us to define the research questions and develop the on-the-ground program design to ensure it is highly relevant for industry.”

Fruit Growers Tasmania CEO Peter Cornish said industry is increasingly exploring and investing in protective cropping systems to manage climate risks, and there has never been a larger appetite for collaboration to solve issues being faced by growers.

“Tasmanian’s have always been early adopters of this technology, particularly in the berry sector where we have seen this technology allow them to manage climate variability, reduce risk, increase crop reliability, and drive business growth and employment outcomes.

“Through this project, we can see the potential for industry to get some important tools that will help them inform production decisions. This project could not have come at a more valuable time.”

Through industry field demonstration days and workshops, trial sites will be accessible to growers. All project findings will be made available to the industry through resources such as fact sheets, webinars and case studies.

Growers in cool climate regions are encouraged to get involved by contacting Dr Nigel Swarts at TIA.

This project is being delivered through Hort Innovation’s Hort Frontiers strategic partnership initiative. Hort Frontiers facilitates collaborative, transformation research and development to support horticulture to 2030, and beyond. TIA is a joint venture of the University of Tasmania and the Tasmanian Government.

A source:  https://www.utas.edu.au

Tags: boosthorticulture
Previous Post

Dutch Young Executives Visit Volcani Center with DryGair

Next Post

What keeps plant roots growing toward gravity? Study identifies four genes

Next Post

What keeps plant roots growing toward gravity? Study identifies four genes

RECOMMENDED NEWS

Indonesia Among Top 10 Destinations For Chinese Tourists In 2017

2 years ago

Square Roots Kenosha Uses New Farming Techniques to Reduce Food Deserts

2 years ago

Bram’s adventures at home and abroad

4 years ago

Greenhouses Without Heat: How Nanoplastic and Biodegradable Mulch Could Double Yields in Hot Climates

3 months ago

BROWSE BY CATEGORIES

  • Aeroponics
  • agronomy
  • Aquaponics
  • Asia
  • Climate (meteo)
  • Company
  • Crop protection
  • Cultivation
  • Cultivation
  • Equipment
  • Europe
  • Event
  • Fertilizers system
  • Greenhouse
  • horticulture
  • Hydroponics systems
  • Indoor climates
  • Innovation
  • Irrigation
  • lighting
  • Logistics
  • Machines
  • Machines system
  • Management
  • Market
  • Market Stories
  • Marketing
  • Organic
  • Packaging system
  • researches
  • Seed
  • Soil
  • Special Climate
  • Suppliers
  • Technique system
  • Vertical farming
  • webinar

BROWSE BY TOPICS

ads Agricultural Innovation Agricultural Technology agriculture Ag Tech climate resilience Controlled Environment Agriculture crop protection cucumbers Energy Efficiency. environmental impact Environmental Sustainability farmers Food Security Greenhouse Greenhouse agriculture greenhouse complex Greenhouse Cultivation greenhouse farming greenhouses greenhouse technology greenhouse vegetables horticulture Hydroponic farming hydroponics Innovation organic farming precision agriculture precision farming renewable energy Russia Russian agriculture Smart Farming Sustainability Sustainable Agriculture sustainable farming tomato Tomatoes tomato production Urban agriculture urban farming vegetable production vegetables vertical farming Water Conservation

POPULAR NEWS

  • Worldwide session on protecting and harnessing the earth’s biodiversity

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Tomato Cultivation; Farming Techniques – A Complete Guide

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Why location and orientation of your greenhouse matter

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Developing trends in the production of greenhouse vegetables in Russia

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Greenhouse farming in Turkmenistan: new sanitary regulations set health and safety standards

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0

Recent News

  • Aquaponics in the Valley: How Rainbow Trout and Hydroponics Are Revolutionizing Small-Scale Farming
  • Aquaponics Revolution: How The Circle is Leading Sustainable Agriculture with 180 Liters of Water Saved per kg of Lettuce
  • Kazakhstan’s New Aquaculture Law: Boosting Sustainable Fish Farming and Investment Opportunities

Category

  • Aeroponics
  • agronomy
  • Aquaponics
  • Asia
  • Climate (meteo)
  • Company
  • Crop protection
  • Cultivation
  • Cultivation
  • Equipment
  • Europe
  • Event
  • Fertilizers system
  • Greenhouse
  • horticulture
  • Hydroponics systems
  • Indoor climates
  • Innovation
  • Irrigation
  • lighting
  • Logistics
  • Machines
  • Machines system
  • Management
  • Market
  • Market Stories
  • Marketing
  • Organic
  • Packaging system
  • researches
  • Seed
  • Soil
  • Special Climate
  • Suppliers
  • Technique system
  • Vertical farming
  • webinar

Recent News

Aquaponics in the Valley: How Rainbow Trout and Hydroponics Are Revolutionizing Small-Scale Farming

June 21, 2025

Aquaponics Revolution: How The Circle is Leading Sustainable Agriculture with 180 Liters of Water Saved per kg of Lettuce

June 20, 2025
  • About Us
  • Advertise
  • Careers
  • Contact

© 2020-2024 Greenhouse News

No Result
View All Result
  • Home

© 2020-2024 Greenhouse News