Register for free to join our community of investors and share your ideas. You will also get access to streaming quotes, interactive charts, trades, portfolio, live options flow and more tools.
Why this industry can change the world at the same time be one of the hottest investments?
The answer is right place right time. And GNPG being a micro cap in a billion dollar emerging growth field, spells potential hot stock.
Think about the potential commodities hedge disruption.
The worldwide commodities market is in the trillions upon trillions a year.
A large reason for the market is as a hedge against supply disruptions from various potential threats. “Climate change, Insects, droughts, mold, weather etc”
With Green Planet Groups technology, supply disruptions and the need to hedge against these unknowns could be mitigated.
The funds used to hedge could be freed up for other more purposeful uses. “Like reinvesting into more growing systems”
This is a game changer.
You're right. Impressive!
Thanks bman for the response. Check out the volume in under 3 hours of trading! Pretty impressive for Green Planet..
I don't know anything in particular, but sometimes authorized numbers go up for entirely good reasons. That could be the case here. Also, just because authorized goes up, doesn't mean the shares have been placed into the float. It just makes them available and sometimes provides more flexibility to do deals.
GNPG!!!
Some one earlier made the statement with the share increase of possible merger. Posting this possibility to this board, any thoughts?
It has been held very tightly all this time and with major stuff coming down the pipe line shortly its only normal to expand on the Authorized share structure in order to be ready for any upcoming events
There will always be a slight pullback after such a big run up in a short time no worries they got amazing things happening as we speak this will ROCK
Added more today!
GNPG!!!!
I’m still holding here. Been a long seven year wait but things are looking great now. They just need to get current and put out a press release.
that is 2 weeks away from today! GO VPER!!
if thats the case we could see a large spike in Green Planet shares come 7/6/2021!
Wonder if there is a merger or buyout in the making and they need more shares authorized for exchange?
GNPG!!!!
# of authorized shares of common stock will be increased to 800,000,000 from 500,000,000. Effective 7/6/2021.
Heck no it’s time to add more
Does anyone own this besides a few here? I want a 300m mc .
They wouldn't be opening a World Headquarters office for nothing! :)
I concure Kishmech! I think Green Planet Group has HUGE upside!!!
OMG GNPG ROCKS THE HOUSE...i am so happy that i didnt sell loaded up FOR THE PAST FEW YEARS i really think its going to a BUCK over the next month or two
Oh Yes this baby will keep going strong very few shares out there in the float and this new blockbuster machines is HUGE
You're probable right.
GNPG!!
yea I have a feeling that we wont be able to keep it quiet here for too long. I have a feeling this board will be flooded within a week..
GNPG is acting up, today!
YES thats perfect love that! Lets keep under the radar for a while nothing wrong with that!
Its coming...this is sweet, what a surprise....
Nobody in otc world talking about this. I’m fine with that!!
Thx bro. I got in early. I also know there are zero shares to short. GLT us all!
Man, you stand to make a lot of money, IMO. Not sure what the price target is, but wouldn't surprise me to see .50 in 6 months. I have a very low average, but only about half the shares you do. Good luck to us!
GNPG!!
What’s our price target here? Holding 1mm shares just under .025
Looks good!!
Nice find gribbs.
Every day this goes up a 1/2 cent. seems very deliberate. Looks like it is being suppressed from a true break out until they start selling or come out with a surprising financial.
GREEN PLANET GROUP SECURES FAVORABLE FINANCING
https://www.greenplanetgroup.com/index.php/2021/06/16/green-planet-group-secures-favorable-financing/
"Future Funds Secured for Long Term Success
Phoenix, AZ — (June 16, 2021) – Green Planet Group, Inc. (OTC PINK: GNPG), an emerging leader in green technology, announced today that it has secured and received funding in its most recent capital raise. Green Planet Group was able to raise funds in record time due to overwhelming interest in vertical organic farming and specifically the company’s patented growing technology providing for faster plant growth with its organic nutrients. The funding will provide Green Planet Group with enough operating capital for the next couple years. The investors have already committed additional funds, as needed, for specific projects. The current funding round will provide the capital to:
Complete the building improvements for its new “World Headquarters.”
Complete the installation of the first- and second-generation growing system in the new world headquarters.
Initiate the urban farm, including the hiring and training of staff. Once completely operational, the urban farm will begin to generate monthly revenues in excess of $37,000.
Upgrade computer systems to allow the ability to continuously monitor customers’ growing systems worldwide, ensuring that each system is producing at its maximum potential.
Update accounting systems, allowing the company to take full advantage of its $21.6 million Non-Operating Loss (NOL) carryforward, which will reduce future corporate taxes and improve profitability.
Update marketing and sales programs to include the second-generation growing system and attend agricultural trade shows later this year.
President/CEO Edmond L. Lonergan stated “securing this funding allows the company’s management to concentrate on its growth, while continuing to develop its technologies”. Lonergan continued “having funding partners that are passionate about high quality organic food production creates a team focused on advancing the health and natural wealth of our planet.”"
Our day is coming
T, one of these days it wouldn’t surprise me if we opened in the dollars.
Bowery farms another ag tech farm raised 300 mil in the blink of an eye. Big money is pouring in this industry Tip of the ice burg. All these other farms are in the dollars and tens of dollars. We are less then 10 cents.
GNPG is steadily moving up, day by day! Where will it be in a month, 6 months, 1 year? Let's watch!
CNBC’s Power Lunch segment “where is the money going” just announced Green and Clean is where the investing public is headed.
GNPG right place right time
GNPG “Each day, this system will produce thirty-two (32) tons of fresh barley fodder or 11,680 tons per year. This daily fodder production will feed 2,500 beef cattle, or 1,300 milk cows, 11,000 sheep, or 256,000 chickens.”
Imagine cash crops using this system If one acre of of this system is equivalent to 750 acres of outdoor agriculture then imagine cash crops
Canadian Cereal grain crops net the grower almost $1000 dollars per acre.
Imagine cash crops , luxury crops , recreational crops.
The production per square foot value could have many many times those values.
Right place right time.
Why the agtech boom isn’t your typical tech disruption
A worker inspects vertical farming beds growing a variety of baby greens beneath light emitting diode (or "LED") lamps and using a patented growing algorithm of controlled light, nutrients and temperatures at an AeroFarms Inc. indoor vertical farming facility in a former indoor paintball arena in Newark, New Jersey, June 24, 2016. Picture taken June 24, 2016. REUTERS/Mike Segar - S1AETMNOEIAA
As populations expand, we need a digital revolution in farming sooner rather than later.
Image: REUTERS/Mike Segar
25 Feb 2019
Karn Manhas
Founder, Terramera
Five years ago, almost no one knew what agtech was. Inside the industry, we didn’t even know what to call what we were doing. But fast forward to today, and agricultural technology – from vertical farming to data science to farm drones – is the new hot thing in investor circles. The Investment Corporation of Dubai alone just dropped $203 million into agtech investments; another $200 million came from the Japanese holding behemoth SoftBank; and dedicated VC funds are zeroing in on the sector’s potential. In 2017, total investment was over $1.5 billion – a new record for the sector, and one that’s setting the stage for explosive growth.
But unlike many of today’s tech disruptions – from smartphones to social media – this one is less about consumer convenience or entertainment than about something far more pressing: our collective survival. The reality is that we have to quickly and efficiently bring farming from the industrial age into the digital one.
In this respect, booming investor interest in agtech should hardly come as a surprise. Market potential is nearly limitless precisely because our appetites are too. We all need to eat, and our population is rapidly growing.
9.8 billion mouths to feed
With a predicted global population of 9.8 billion by 2050, we’re going to need to figure out how to feed a much larger population, and fast. Studies show this could mean we need to grow as much as double the amount of food we do today, simply to avoid food security issues and mass social disruption. Already, more than 3 million children die worldwide each year because they don’t get enough to eat. At the same time, climate change is making it harder to feed the world through conventional means – in fact, with our current rate of crop yields, we’ll only have enough food for half of that projected population.
Doomsday predictions about not being able to feed the world have been around since the days of Thomas Malthus, and it’s not my intent to deliver any more here. But it’s critical to note that growing enough food will be no small task in the years ahead, and that the kind of agriculture practised today – reliant on industrial-era concepts of land use and productivity – isn’t poised to get us there.
This is where digital technology has a critical role to play. I’m not talking about developing new, synthetic chemicals to apply to fields, or building ever larger corporate farms. At its core, agtech is about using advanced monitoring and data analysis to do more with less – to find ways to increase yields without burdening already overtaxed resources such as land and water.
Right now, a cross-section of technologies and disciplines – from sensors, artificial intelligence and big data to biotech and robotics – are being used by progressive startups to boost global food supplies. For example, Hortau systems is increasing watering efficiency through smart monitoring, which in turn increases plant yield. Phytech is optimizing crop production with its “Plant Internet of Things” – smart devices in fields that send simple colour-coded alerts to smartphones with recommendations and warnings. Meanwhile, the Israeli-based CropX uses hardware and software to measure soil moisture, conductivity and temperature, allowing farmers to save water.
I can’t stress this enough: this disruption is so unique precisely because it’s utterly necessary. Unlike Apple’s continuous need to convince consumers to purchase new products via planned obsolescence, the agtech market will grow organically (indeed, exponentially) over time, giving early entrants an edge and access to an ever-increasing customer base.
Tech to make farming viable again
Apart from the pressing need to keep us fed, agtech addresses another crucial pain point: keeping farming viable for the next generation of people who grow our food.
Farmers have never been shy about embracing new technologies – the wheel, tractors and chemical compounds in fertilizers a just few that have made a world of difference through the centuries. Yet a yawning tech gap in farming has emerged in recent decades, with real-life consequences. In our approaches to land management, resource use, labour, transportation and more, we’re firmly stuck in an outdated industrial model – emphasizing large-scale farms and massive output at all costs, while ignoring externalities from environmental impact to financial repercussions and human tolls.
Case in point: conventional farming is largely viable today because it’s propped up with massive government subsidies. The US currently pays around $25 billion to farmers annually. But even with a cash infusion, it’s still a tough go for today’s farmers. The world’s most important career has notoriously tight margins and is often a losing proposition. (Grapes, for example, bring in as little as $6 of profit per acre, and they are considered a higher-profit crop.) It’s little wonder that young people aren’t stepping into the industry anymore. (Britain is even facing a farmer shortage.)
All of which is to say: our current methods of commercial farming got us to where we are, but the way we farm now isn’t sustainable for the planet, for individuals or for societies long-term. But agtech is already playing a role here to reduce loss and overhead while adding more predictability, and profit, to the job.
For example, Cainthus, an AI facial recognition software for cows, allows small farmers to maintain larger herds and track the health of individual animals, right down to how much they've eaten each day and how much milk they’ve been given. Meanwhile, aWhere is a next-gen Farmers' Almanac, monitoring and forecasting the weather with pinpoint accuracy thanks to a global network of 1.4 million weather stations. Drones and robots from companies like Farmbot are helping fill the farm labour gap, with drag-and-drop interfaces that allow farmers to build sequences of actions for hardware or set repeating growing regimens. Blue River Technology, recently acquired by John Deere, uses cameras and AI to dole out herbicide more precisely as needed.
Feeding the shifting tastes of consumers
Aside from these pull factors, there’s a critical push factor behind the agtech boom: consumer demand for cleaner food. Amazon’s recent acquisition of Whole Foods is a clear sign that big business is responding to consumer interests in natural food. Even Walmart has gotten into the organics game, and is now one of the biggest organic grocers in North America. Indeed, demand is so high that we have trouble growing enough: less than 1% of domestic farmland is currently certified organic, and Americans are spending $1 billion a year to import organic foods.
Have you read?
How to fight climate change in agriculture while protecting jobs
How do we help developing nations to cut emissions from agriculture?
A growing percentage of shoppers (58% in the US alone) are insisting on organic or clean food. This isn’t just millennials being picky. Whether we’re talking about concerns over pesticides and cancer, allergic reactions, the rise of celiac disease or fears about contaminated irrigation water leading to disease outbreaks, our health increasingly depends on having access to safe, trustworthy food.
Technology will need to fill the gap.
To trace food, ripe.io’s technology maps its journey from field to shop shelves, so that retailers, chefs and consumers know their purchases are truly sustainable. My own company, Terramera, is developing natural, “plant-intelligence” pest control to increase yields without resorting to chemical pesticides. On the vertical farming front, Mirai is using LED lighting and automation to stack farming plots indoors, maximizing every square foot for output and minimizing hands-on labour.
There’s one difference between the agtech revolution and the many tech disruptions that have preceded it: most of us won’t actually notice it’s happening. The digitization of agriculture is necessary simply to maintain the status quo. If we want to continue to go shopping – to continue filling our baskets with healthy, affordable food – we need to fundamentally rethink how we do agriculture. Behind the scenes, a radical shift is needed to retool our food systems and make the most of what we have for a growing population. Failing that, the average trip to buy food may soon be anything but.
Karn Manhas (@karnmanhas) is the founder of Terramera, which focuses on using technology to grow affordable, clean food for everyone.
This article sums it up nicely. 5 cent GNPG should be a few decimal places to the right.
Right place right time
https://www.weforum.org/agenda/2019/02/why-the-agtech-boom-isn-t-your-typical-tech-disruption/
Why the agtech boom isn’t your typical tech disruption
A worker inspects vertical farming beds growing a variety of baby greens beneath light emitting diode (or "LED") lamps and using a patented growing algorithm of controlled light, nutrients and temperatures at an AeroFarms Inc. indoor vertical farming facility in a former indoor paintball arena in Newark, New Jersey, June 24, 2016. Picture taken June 24, 2016. REUTERS/Mike Segar - S1AETMNOEIAA
As populations expand, we need a digital revolution in farming sooner rather than later.
Image: REUTERS/Mike Segar
25 Feb 2019
Karn Manhas
Founder, Terramera
Five years ago, almost no one knew what agtech was. Inside the industry, we didn’t even know what to call what we were doing. But fast forward to today, and agricultural technology – from vertical farming to data science to farm drones – is the new hot thing in investor circles. The Investment Corporation of Dubai alone just dropped $203 million into agtech investments; another $200 million came from the Japanese holding behemoth SoftBank; and dedicated VC funds are zeroing in on the sector’s potential. In 2017, total investment was over $1.5 billion – a new record for the sector, and one that’s setting the stage for explosive growth.
But unlike many of today’s tech disruptions – from smartphones to social media – this one is less about consumer convenience or entertainment than about something far more pressing: our collective survival. The reality is that we have to quickly and efficiently bring farming from the industrial age into the digital one.
In this respect, booming investor interest in agtech should hardly come as a surprise. Market potential is nearly limitless precisely because our appetites are too. We all need to eat, and our population is rapidly growing.
9.8 billion mouths to feed
With a predicted global population of 9.8 billion by 2050, we’re going to need to figure out how to feed a much larger population, and fast. Studies show this could mean we need to grow as much as double the amount of food we do today, simply to avoid food security issues and mass social disruption. Already, more than 3 million children die worldwide each year because they don’t get enough to eat. At the same time, climate change is making it harder to feed the world through conventional means – in fact, with our current rate of crop yields, we’ll only have enough food for half of that projected population.
Doomsday predictions about not being able to feed the world have been around since the days of Thomas Malthus, and it’s not my intent to deliver any more here. But it’s critical to note that growing enough food will be no small task in the years ahead, and that the kind of agriculture practised today – reliant on industrial-era concepts of land use and productivity – isn’t poised to get us there.
This is where digital technology has a critical role to play. I’m not talking about developing new, synthetic chemicals to apply to fields, or building ever larger corporate farms. At its core, agtech is about using advanced monitoring and data analysis to do more with less – to find ways to increase yields without burdening already overtaxed resources such as land and water.
Right now, a cross-section of technologies and disciplines – from sensors, artificial intelligence and big data to biotech and robotics – are being used by progressive startups to boost global food supplies. For example, Hortau systems is increasing watering efficiency through smart monitoring, which in turn increases plant yield. Phytech is optimizing crop production with its “Plant Internet of Things” – smart devices in fields that send simple colour-coded alerts to smartphones with recommendations and warnings. Meanwhile, the Israeli-based CropX uses hardware and software to measure soil moisture, conductivity and temperature, allowing farmers to save water.
I can’t stress this enough: this disruption is so unique precisely because it’s utterly necessary. Unlike Apple’s continuous need to convince consumers to purchase new products via planned obsolescence, the agtech market will grow organically (indeed, exponentially) over time, giving early entrants an edge and access to an ever-increasing customer base.
Tech to make farming viable again
Apart from the pressing need to keep us fed, agtech addresses another crucial pain point: keeping farming viable for the next generation of people who grow our food.
Farmers have never been shy about embracing new technologies – the wheel, tractors and chemical compounds in fertilizers a just few that have made a world of difference through the centuries. Yet a yawning tech gap in farming has emerged in recent decades, with real-life consequences. In our approaches to land management, resource use, labour, transportation and more, we’re firmly stuck in an outdated industrial model – emphasizing large-scale farms and massive output at all costs, while ignoring externalities from environmental impact to financial repercussions and human tolls.
Case in point: conventional farming is largely viable today because it’s propped up with massive government subsidies. The US currently pays around $25 billion to farmers annually. But even with a cash infusion, it’s still a tough go for today’s farmers. The world’s most important career has notoriously tight margins and is often a losing proposition. (Grapes, for example, bring in as little as $6 of profit per acre, and they are considered a higher-profit crop.) It’s little wonder that young people aren’t stepping into the industry anymore. (Britain is even facing a farmer shortage.)
All of which is to say: our current methods of commercial farming got us to where we are, but the way we farm now isn’t sustainable for the planet, for individuals or for societies long-term. But agtech is already playing a role here to reduce loss and overhead while adding more predictability, and profit, to the job.
For example, Cainthus, an AI facial recognition software for cows, allows small farmers to maintain larger herds and track the health of individual animals, right down to how much they've eaten each day and how much milk they’ve been given. Meanwhile, aWhere is a next-gen Farmers' Almanac, monitoring and forecasting the weather with pinpoint accuracy thanks to a global network of 1.4 million weather stations. Drones and robots from companies like Farmbot are helping fill the farm labour gap, with drag-and-drop interfaces that allow farmers to build sequences of actions for hardware or set repeating growing regimens. Blue River Technology, recently acquired by John Deere, uses cameras and AI to dole out herbicide more precisely as needed.
Feeding the shifting tastes of consumers
Aside from these pull factors, there’s a critical push factor behind the agtech boom: consumer demand for cleaner food. Amazon’s recent acquisition of Whole Foods is a clear sign that big business is responding to consumer interests in natural food. Even Walmart has gotten into the organics game, and is now one of the biggest organic grocers in North America. Indeed, demand is so high that we have trouble growing enough: less than 1% of domestic farmland is currently certified organic, and Americans are spending $1 billion a year to import organic foods.
Have you read?
How to fight climate change in agriculture while protecting jobs
How do we help developing nations to cut emissions from agriculture?
A growing percentage of shoppers (58% in the US alone) are insisting on organic or clean food. This isn’t just millennials being picky. Whether we’re talking about concerns over pesticides and cancer, allergic reactions, the rise of celiac disease or fears about contaminated irrigation water leading to disease outbreaks, our health increasingly depends on having access to safe, trustworthy food.
Technology will need to fill the gap.
To trace food, ripe.io’s technology maps its journey from field to shop shelves, so that retailers, chefs and consumers know their purchases are truly sustainable. My own company, Terramera, is developing natural, “plant-intelligence” pest control to increase yields without resorting to chemical pesticides. On the vertical farming front, Mirai is using LED lighting and automation to stack farming plots indoors, maximizing every square foot for output and minimizing hands-on labour.
There’s one difference between the agtech revolution and the many tech disruptions that have preceded it: most of us won’t actually notice it’s happening. The digitization of agriculture is necessary simply to maintain the status quo. If we want to continue to go shopping – to continue filling our baskets with healthy, affordable food – we need to fundamentally rethink how we do agriculture. Behind the scenes, a radical shift is needed to retool our food systems and make the most of what we have for a growing population. Failing that, the average trip to buy food may soon be anything but.
Nice news!
Just saw it!!!
https://www.otcmarkets.com/stock/GNPG/news/story?e&id=1918519
Big news. Hopefully their build out is completed soon and they start selling. The have backers now.
These funds are providing the capital to:
Complete the building improvements for our new “World Headquarters.”
Complete the move of the development growing system from Congress, AZ, and install it in our new location. This will allow us to begin the startup of our urban farm including the hiring and training of staff. Once completely operational, the urban farm will begin to generate monthly revenues of approximately $37,000.
Install an enhanced computer system including the ability to monitor customer growing systems worldwide, ensuring that each system is producing its maximum quantity of nutritious food.
Conduct a search for and hiring of the professional talent needed to complement current management and help accelerate the development of our growing systems technologies.
Update our in-house accounting system allowing us to fully take advantage of our $21.6 million Non-Operating Loss (NOL) Carryforward which will reduce our future corporate taxes and improve profitability.
Greatly enhance our marketing and sales programs including attending agricultural trade shows later this year.
Nice find VF8. Things are moving forward!
Don’t feel sorry for growers. This is a long overdue technological shift in the growing industry. The industry hasn’t really changed in hundreds of years until now.
No wonder billions of venture capital is pouring in the last few months.
The quality of life for growers and farmers will increase dramatically. Now they can grow food year round with a spare barn or warehouse. Way less labor , less waste , less disease and more successful and healthier harvests
It makes growing a high paying clean industry now.
GNPG micro cap. Right place right time
Here’s an interesting article
The Rise of AgTech: How It's Transforming the American Farming Landscape
Eden Green Technology - Mustard Greens - Hydroponic Greenhouse web friendly.JPG
Modern farming has come a long way from its roots.. Farming operations are beginning to look a lot less like Green Acres and more like Silicon Valley. Today, AgTech plays a crucial role in almost every aspect of a commercial farm. But it’s about more than just innovation for innovation’s sake. Much of this technology will help us solve real problems of pollution, soil degradation, and food deserts.
What Is AgTech?
If you’re not familiar with the term, AgTech is a combination of the words “agricultural” and “technology.” There are hundreds of different types of AgTech being used on farms and other commercial agrarian enterprises today. Most are employed to help farmers improve their yields, profitability, and sustainability.
Today, AgTech is big business. Each year, venture capitalists worldwide invest billions of dollars in AgTech firms, and the number is on the rise. These investors hope to solve problems relating to feeding a growing global population while improving the productivity and working conditions of farmers. They also hope to make agriculture more sustainable in an effort to combat climate change. The good news is that technologies are being developed and deployed to help address each of these problems for an overall healthier, more environmentally-friendly agricultural model.
Top AgTech Trends
The types of agricultural technologies are too numerous to list here, but a few significant trends are capturing the attention of investors and farmers alike. Here are some of our favorite trends in AgTech today.
Indoor Vertical Farm Techniques
To feed a growing urban population without wasting precious resources to transport food over thousands of miles, we need to bring agriculture into urban environments. Since urban space is at a premium and there isn’t room for acres of fields and crops in the city, traditional farming methods simply won’t work there. The need for urban agriculture is one key reason why indoor vertical farming is intriguing to many in the AgTech world.
An indoor vertical farm grows crops in trays or towers stacked high within a greenhouse or other indoor farming facility. With this technology, companies like Eden Green Technology can produce about 500 tons of leafy greens per year, using only an acre-and-a-half of space. And since hydroponic farms don’t require soil and feature climate control technology, they can be placed in areas where farming would otherwise be impossible due to climate conditions. These vertical farm greenhouses can also produce a dozen or more harvests per year, with no dependence on or worries regarding outdoor seasonal changes.
Robotics and Automation
With so many repetitive farming tasks, it’s no wonder robotics and automation are a good fit for AgTech. Yet, the delicate nature of many crops makes this type of farming technology a challenge. Fortunately, many robotics firms are taking up that challenge and producing options that allow machines to do some of the back-breaking labor required on the farm.
The Berry 7 (B7) robot from Harvest CROO Robotics can handle tasks as delicate and sensitive as picking strawberries. The robot can move leaves aside, inspect the berries beneath, and then gently pick only those berries ready for harvest. A single robotic harvester can pick eight acres of strawberries in a single day, solving the farm labor shortage by replacing about 30 human pickers with just one robotic harvester. This technology would have been unthinkable just a generation ago.
Regenerative Agriculture
It’s no secret — especially in farming communities — that we cannot continue the way we have been in recent years. Old farming practices are depleting the soil, contributing to greenhouse gas emissions, and generally an unsustainable practice. Regenerative agriculture seeks to not only stop the harm caused by these methods but to turn them around, putting nutrients back into the soil and absorbing carbon from the atmosphere as we grow crops and livestock.
Some of these solutions are low-tech — holistic grazing practices, for example, were in use for centuries before commercial agriculture became the norm. But increasingly, farmers are turning to AgTech to help them preserve Earth’s natural resources and farm sustainably. Part of the problem is that regenerative agriculture methods require more attention to detail than traditional commercial farming. AI software and high-tech monitoring systems allow farmers to innovate their practices and produce crops that are actually good for the environment.
Biotech for Agriculture
Biotechnology, which is technology related to living things, has been used in agriculture for decades. In the 1990s, biologists began developing genetically engineered plants and animals designed to produce more food faster. Even before that, selective breeding and crossbreeding processes have brought us better and more unique plants and livestock. But today’s biotechnology is making great strides toward improving farm output, raising farm incomes, and reducing losses due to stress and disease.
Current biotechnology trends include developments toward herbicide tolerance, stacked traits, insect tolerance, and more. Companies like PivotBio are offering advanced fertilizer solutions designed to boost crop yields and protect the environment at the same time. Nutrien Ag Solutions offers high-performing seeds for healthier crops. These are just two examples out of the hundreds on the market. In fact, the worldwide agricultural biotechnology market could reach more than $25 billion USD by 2025.
It’s safe to say that technology in agriculture is here to stay, and it’s making a big difference in the way crops are planted, grown, and harvested. With these cutting-edge technologies and many more, we hope to see a cleaner, more efficient, and more sustainable agriculture industry in the near future.
Homebrew, gribbs is correct. The financials on the website are recent and current. What makes you state those are “promo sites” ?
The ibox could use facts please. Not speculation
They did post financials on their website through 3rd quarter 2021 (December 2020). Not sure why they do not show on OTC site.
They are keeping everything close to the vest for some reason. Hopefully when they actually sell a growing system they get more public.
https://www.greenplanetgroup.com/index.php/content-box/
Home, thanks for moderating the board.
What makes you say the company’s websites are “promo sites” ?
6 month chart also looking good:
https://ih.advfn.com/stock-market/USOTC/green-planet-pk-GNPG/chart/real-time
Followers
|
102
|
Posters
|
|
Posts (Today)
|
1
|
Posts (Total)
|
9921
|
Created
|
01/10/08
|
Type
|
Free
|
Moderators |
Volume | |
Day Range: | |
Bid Price | |
Ask Price | |
Last Trade Time: |