
The investment fast‑tracks AI‑driven, chemical‑free weed control, giving growers a scalable tool to meet labor, regulatory and sustainability pressures.
Weed management remains one of agriculture’s most resource‑intensive tasks, with herbicides accounting for a large share of input costs and environmental impact. Labor shortages and tighter regulations are pushing growers to seek alternatives that preserve yields without compromising sustainability. AI‑enabled robotics, such as AgriPass’s RHIC system, address this gap by mimicking human agronomic judgment: high‑resolution optical sensors map crop rows, identify weed roots, and trigger precise mechanical actuation only where needed. This approach reduces chemical reliance, protects soil microbiota, and can be deployed at commercial scale, aligning with regenerative farming goals.
The RHIC platform’s core advantage lies in its Adaptive Sensing Technology (AST), which fuses computer‑vision data with contextual AI to adjust actions in real time as field conditions evolve. By focusing on high‑value vegetable crops, AgriPass targets a segment where weed pressure directly erodes profit margins and where growers are most willing to adopt premium technology. Early deployments in the U.S. and EU have demonstrated consistent weed suppression and lower operational costs, positioning the company as a frontrunner in the emerging market for selective mechanical cultivation.
The recent $7.5 million funding round provides the capital needed to ramp up manufacturing, expand field trials, and broaden the crop portfolio beyond vegetables. Coupled with the FYELD partnership, AgriPass can integrate its AI across a wider array of equipment, accelerating industry adoption. As the ag‑tech ecosystem increasingly values climate‑friendly solutions, AgriPass’s scalable, non‑chemical weed control is poised to become a cornerstone of future sustainable farming practices.
Israel-based AgriPass announced the completion of a $7.5 million seed funding round led by Harbor Venture Consulting, with participation from E44 Climate Ventures and other ecosystem partners. The capital will be used to scale its RHIC robotic weed‑control platform across the United States and Europe, accelerating commercial deployment of its AI‑driven selective weeding technology.
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