Eternal.ag closes €8M round for autonomous greenhouse robots
Agri-robotics startup Eternal.ag has raised €8 million in fresh funding to accelerate the rollout of its autonomous greenhouse robots across Europe. The investment will support product industrialisation, expansion into new markets and deeper integration with high-tech greenhouse operators seeking to automate labor-intensive tasks.
Targeting Europe’s high-value greenhouse market
Eternal.ag focuses on large, commercial greenhouses growing high-value crops such as tomatoes, cucumbers and peppers. Its autonomous platforms are designed to navigate dense rows, capture plant-level data and execute routine operations with minimal human intervention. By combining robotics with advanced computer vision and AI algorithms, the company aims to optimise yields while reducing dependence on seasonal labor.
The newly raised €8 million will be used to scale pilot projects into full commercial deployments in key European horticulture hubs. Funding will also go towards enhancing the company’s software stack, including predictive analytics that can flag early signs of plant disease, nutrient stress or suboptimal climate conditions.
Automation to tackle labor and efficiency pressures
Greenhouse operators across Europe are grappling with rising wages, chronic labor shortages and pressure to deliver more sustainable production. Eternal.ag positions its robots as a way to address these structural challenges by automating repetitive tasks such as crop monitoring, yield estimation and quality checks.
By continuously scanning plants and feeding data into a central platform, the robots can generate precise maps of crop health and growth. This enables growers to fine-tune irrigation, fertilisation and climate control, potentially reducing resource use while boosting output. The company argues that this data-driven approach will be critical as controlled-environment agriculture scales to meet demand for year-round, locally grown produce.
Positioning within Europe’s agri-tech ecosystem
The €8 million round underscores growing investor confidence in agri-tech and agricultural robotics as agriculture undergoes a structural digital transformation. With this capital, Eternal.ag aims to cement its role as a core technology partner for European greenhouse groups, integrating its autonomous systems into existing infrastructure rather than replacing it.
As regulators and retailers push for lower emissions and more efficient resource use, demand for highly automated, data-rich greenhouses is expected to rise. Eternal.ag is betting that autonomous robotics will become a standard layer in this next generation of food production systems.

