LONDON, April 14 -- The government of the United Kingdom issued the following news:

Cutting-edgetechnologies from robotics to AI will be fast-tracked into practical tools for farmers, backed byaround £50millionof public and private investment, Farming Minister Dame Angela Eagle announced today.

The funding willdeliverup to12innovative toolsto farms, helping farmers produce morewhilecutting labour,energyand fertiliser use, backed by £8 million in government funding and£40million in private investment.

Several of the technologies focus on delivering practical, nature-based solutions for farmers. FA Bio's project is developing a "living" biopesticide that uses beneficial fungi to protect wheat and oilseed rape from destructive pests like aphids and cabbage stem flea beetle. Applied at planting, it could provide season-long protection while reducing the need for repeated chemical spraying.

The investment also backs innovations to boost the resilience of trees and landscapes.Rhizocoreisidentifyingthe most effective native fungi to help treesestablishand thrive, improving survival rates in forestry and agroforestry while accelerating carbon capture and supporting woodland recovery.

Farming Minister Dame Angela Eagle said:

Farmers know the right tools can make all the difference.

This investment is about getting practical, proven technology into their hands faster - whetherthat'simproving animal health, cuttingcostsor making day-to-day jobs easier.

By backing innovation with both public and private funding, we're supporting farm businesses to boost productivity, strengthen resilience and help secure the future of British agriculture.

Head of Agrifood at Innovate UK, Chris Danks, said:

The success of this latest round shows how Investor Partnerships help high‑potential UK businesses grow and scale by combining public grant funding with private investment, turning great ideas into commercial success.

By launching a new round, we are continuing to back innovation that gives farmers access to practical, scalable technologies that improve productivity, resilience and sustainability, while also supporting long‑term economic growth.

This approach accelerates commercialisation, builds investable businesses, and helps crowd in private finance for the benefit of the UK economy.

On top of this funding, andspeaking at theAgricultural Engineers Association Conference, the Ministeralsoconfirmeda further £5 million Governmentspringboardfunding round for 2026 to 2027, seeking to drive more private investment intoAgri-Tech growth.

Opening this spring, it will support the next generation of high-potentialagri-techbusinesses toscale up and deliver for farmers,helpingtobuildamore profitable,productive,resilientand sustainable farming sector.

Delivered through the Government's Farming Innovation Programme in partnership with Innovate UK, the Investor Partnerships initiative uses public funding to co-invest alongside private backers, helping to unlock greater overall investment inagri-tech businesses.

Notes to editors

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Projects are funded through theFarming Innovation Programme, Defra's flagship innovation scheme, delivered byInnovate UKas part ofUK Research and Innovation.

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This is ablended finance initiative; projects must secure private investmentasaconditionofreceiving Defra funding

Project quotes

Rhizocorefounder and CEO, Dr Toby Parkes, said:

The investor partnership grant will accelerate our data collection on the performance of different fungi in different soil environments.

This data will enable us to improve our products by selecting the right fungi for our customers' sites, resulting in more trees surviving and growing faster, increasing the ROI we return to our customers and the benefit our products provide to the environment.

CEO and Co-Founder of Fa Bio, Dr Angela de Manzanos, said:

The Investor Partnerships programme enables us to fast-track a biological alternative to chemical insecticides for two of the UK's most important crops.

By aligning public funding with private investment, it supports the commercialisation of biological innovation that reduce reliance on synthetic inputs, protect yields, and improve farm sustainability.

This approach will strengthen UK food security while building a competitive, innovation-ledagri-tech sector.

Disclaimer: Curated by HT Syndication.