iGrow Pre-Owned

View Original

Ocado To Fund New Vertical Farm Near Bristol As Sales Leap

By Holly Williams, Hannah Baker, David Laister

July 6, 2021


Ocado is planning to “assist” with the building of a vertical farm near Bristol, it has announced.

The online grocer said it had invested £5 million in Lincolnshire-based Jones Food Company (JFC) as part of a wider £25 million raise.

The funding will be used to help JFC - Europe’s largest vertical farm - to build a second site outside the South West city.

Ocado said its original stake in the Scunthorpe business, which uses hydroponics and renewable energy to grow herbs and leafy greens, was now worth “more than double” its initial investment, made in mid 2019.

JFC launched in early 2018 with a 5,000 sq m farm in an adapted coldstore, with an entrepreneur and expert agronomist at the helm.

Initial harvests saw enough produce grown for 11 million sandwiches.

The announcement was made as Ocado posted its half-year results on Tuesday. The company said in the six months to May 30, losses narrowed sharply as sales surged.

But the company said shoppers had begun returning to some pre-pandemic habits due to easing restrictions.

Jones Food Company is an energy intensive business, and has partnered with Flexitricity to participate in demand side response for the National Grid. (Image: HLC Creative)

Ocado posted a £23.6m loss before tax over the period - down from losses of £40.6m a year earlier. Underlying earnings – the company’s preferred measure – rose 41% to £61m.

Ocado said revenues for its retail joint venture with Marks & Spencer jumped 19.8% higher in the first half to £1.2bn

This comes as a marked slowdown on the 39.7% sales rise notched up in the first quarter to February

The online grocer also said its first UK mini Customer Fulfilment Centre (CFC) in Avonmouth, near Bristol, was “ramping faster” than any facility before it.

Lead Photo: Ocado has invested millions into Scunthorpe vertical farming start-up Jones Food Company