Insider Brief
- Nature’s Miracle signed a memorandum of understanding with robotics company DROMNI to explore deployment of AI-enabled autonomous ground vehicles across agriculture, logistics, industrial automation and AI data center operations.
- According to the company, the partnership will initially focus on pilot deployments for applications including greenhouse automation, material handling, infrastructure monitoring and facility operations.
- The companies also plan to evaluate localized assembly, testing and potential future U.S.-based production of autonomous robotic platforms and related systems.
Nature’s Miracle is expanding further into robotics and industrial automation through a memorandum of understanding with AI robotics company Dromni.
According to Nature’s Miracle, the agreement calls for the two companies to explore development and deployment of autonomous robotic systems for the U.S. market, initially focused on unmanned ground vehicles operating across greenhouse agriculture, logistics, energy infrastructure, industrial facilities and AI data center environments.
The partnership would combine Dromni’s autonomous robotics technology, including navigation, perception systems and heavy-duty robotic platforms, with Nature’s Miracle’s U.S. operating footprint and infrastructure initiatives.
“This collaboration represents an important strategic step in expanding Nature’s Miracle’s AI infrastructure ecosystem beyond agriculture into intelligent automation and robotics,” Nature’s Holding chairman and CEO Tie “James” Li said in the announcement. “We believe autonomous ground robotics will play a major role in the future of agriculture, energy infrastructure, logistics, and AI-enabled industrial operations. By partnering with DROMNI, we aim to accelerate the deployment of advanced robotic solutions tailored for the U.S. market.”
According to Nature’s Miracle, the companies plan to evaluate early U.S. pilot deployments for autonomous ground robots across:
- Greenhouse and indoor farming automation
- Material handling and logistics
- Data center inspection and security
- Energy infrastructure monitoring
- Industrial automation
- Emergency response support
The agreement also outlines potential expansion into localized assembly, testing and future U.S.-based production, alongside commercialization efforts and possible joint ventures. While the initial focus is on ground robots, the companies said they may also explore aerial systems for inspection, mapping, logistics and integrated air-ground operations.
Nature’s Miracle also said the agreement could expand beyond pilot deployments into localized assembly, testing and potential U.S.-based production capabilities, though the memorandum remains nonbinding and subject to future negotiations.