We’re proud to share that Nourish Labs was featured in the October 2024 issue of Greenhouse Canada, in an article exploring the future of artificial intelligence and automation in agriculture.
At Nourish Labs, we believe precision and predictability are the foundation of modern crop cultivation. Our autonomous fertigation platform was recognized for its ability to help growers produce the most consistent, highest-quality, and highest-yielding crops possible—while reducing inputs and risk.
“Our system delivers fresh, homogenized, pH-balanced plant nutrition with milliliter precision to every plant, at exactly the right time,” says Justin Valmont, Chief Product Officer at Nourish Labs.






Nourish Labs’ fertigation software is designed with today’s growers in mind—offering remote access, intuitive controls, and 24/7 automation. As agriculture shifts toward data-driven, precision-based systems, AllSet aligns with industry trends by giving Master Growers and Operations Managers granular control over nutrition, timing, and uniformity across zones. It bridges the gap between legacy infrastructure and modern automation—empowering farms to scale efficiently while embracing the future of ag-tech.
A key strength of the Nourish Labs platform is its flexibility. “It’s a fifth-generation platform that is completely modular,” says Valmont. Growers can start with a core system and scale up as operations grow. To ensure a seamless fit, Nourish Labs technicians conduct on-site assessments of irrigation, plumbing, and electrical infrastructure.
Beyond automation, the platform delivers measurable operational benefits, including:
Significant reductions in water and fertilizer usage
Lower effluent runoff
Minimized risk of human error
Improved ROI through consistent crop performance and reduced input waste
As Greenhouse Canada reports, AI and automation are no longer just on the horizon—they’re already changing how greenhouse operators manage their crops. We’re excited to be at the forefront of that shift, helping growers scale smarter, optimize resources, and operate with greater peace of mind.
This article was adapted from “AUTONOMOUS AGRICULTURE a premature promise, Exploring innovation and the adoption gap” originally published in the October 2024 issue of Greenhouse Canada Magazine.


