About

We are rebuilding the foundation underneath agriculture.

Harvestria was founded on a simple observation: the infrastructure most taken for granted in modern agriculture is the six inches of living matter beneath our feet — and on most working land, it is failing. Our work is to restore it, measurably, on the land that already feeds people.

Operating principles

What the company is built on.

Eight assumptions written into every protocol, partnership, and policy. Not framed and hung — written into the work.

Soil is the foundation.

Beneath every road, port, and power grid sits the oldest working asset of all. We treat soil with the seriousness civilization once reserved for water and rail.

Farmer economics first.

If the farmer does not profit, nothing else works. Every protocol is underwritten by a unit-economic model the farmer can verify themselves.

Biology builds. Chemistry depletes.

Microbial communities, organic carbon, and root networks build on themselves. Year three of a Harvestria field is not three times year one. It is different in kind.

Productivity and sustainability are not opposites.

The old trade-off — yield now, soil later — was a story told by industries that profited from depletion. Living soil produces more, not less.

Outcomes, not inputs.

We are paid for restored productivity, not for tonnes of product shipped.

Water and soil are inseparable.

There is no water strategy without a soil strategy. The cheapest reservoir on earth is a hectare that can hold what falls on it.

Healthy soil creates resilient nations.

Import dependence is a sovereignty problem long before it becomes a hunger problem. Resilient harvests are the precondition of stable states.

Globally relevant, locally specific.

Every soil is different. Every prescription is custom. The platform makes that economical.

Origin

A company that begins underground.

The team behind Harvestria came together from soil microbiology, agricultural economics, remote sensing, and infrastructure finance. We share an unfashionable conviction: that one of the most consequential problems of the next century isn't energy, compute, or capital — it's whether the land that feeds us can keep feeding us.

We are headquartered between research stations and farms, not between conference rooms. Every commitment we make is measurable on a parcel of land. Every promise is auditable in yield, in carbon, in water, and in the microbiome itself.