Past projects managed by James Hutton Institute Scientific Services

James Hutton Institute Scientific Services manage a range of spin-in and spin-out companies.

Funder – Innovate UK

The Cherry Berry project used a field-based plant and environmental monitoring approach to develop environmental models of blueberry bud initiation and cherry June Drop, attempting to identify signals that arise from the plants short-term responses to environmental conditions (‘sensing’), to identify the point(s) at which the plant’s development leads to the unwanted phenotype (excessive June Drop or excessive vegetative bud development).

The project outputs had the potential to aid the development of bespoke crop management systems in the UK, helping to mitigate the effects of environmental factors to maximise and stabilise yield for cherry growers. This could in turn encourage new plantations of cherry, reduce the reliance on imports and have implications for other crop and crop breeding practices.

Glen Dee Raspberries

Funder – Innovate UK

The Nanocell PPE project supported the development of completely new PPE materials to offer improved safety and comfort by being highly absorbent, breathable and able to actively kill viruses and bacteria.  The potential new materials will also be multiuse, washable and environmentally friendly.

Most PPE is single use, contains plastics, is not easily recyclable and generally is disposed of via landfill or discarded into the environment. It is estimated that if each person in the UK uses a single disposable mask each day for a year this would result in 66,000 tonnes of contaminated plastic waste (which would be a reservoir of infection) and have ten-fold more of a climate change impact than reusable masks.

The project demonstrated the feasibility of producing materials derived from agricultural materials and integrating these into fabric that would enable masks and other types of PPE to be manufactured.  These materials were shown to be highly effective against viruses and bacteria with the next stage to overcome barriers to entry into target markets.

Funder – Innovate UK

This project created the world’s first pest forecast model which can be applied to multiple crop-pest-geography combinations. This innovative approach provided dramatically improved predictions with a breakthrough level of hyper-localisation and a reduction in the total number of alerts (4x less than current levels).

This broad-spectrum approach to forecasting is highly innovative and has the potential to drive synergistic improvements in the usage of inputs across all of the UKs most important crops; reductions in agro-chem usage, increase in crop yields and reduction of the carbon footprint of UK agriculture.

Join us in shaping the future by partnering with innovators at the forefront of scientific advancement!

Andrew Bowen, Innovation Manager

Contact for more information

Head of James Hutton Limited
Based in Dundee