
Automation in 2026 provides commercial growers the ability to tailor fertigation, climate, light recipes and water treatment to the specific biology and market standards of flowers, vegetables, and cannabis.
Climate Control Systems Inc. offers integrated platforms like the Fertigation Manager™, Climate Manager™, and Ozone Pro Water Treatment™ that can be configured differently for each crop group while running on one unified control stack.
Core Automation Modules for 2026 Greenhouses
Most advanced operations now build around three core modules: fertigation, climate control, and water treatment. Climate Control Systems’ Fertigation Manager™ centralizes irrigation recipes across flower and vegetable crops, while supporting high-value cannabis production with strain-specific feed schedules.
Climate Manager™ governs temperature, humidity, CO₂, air flow and shading to maintain targeted vapor pressure deficit (VPD) in perfect quality for each crop type.
Ozone Pro Water Treatment™ sterilizes and recycles drain water, cutting fertilizer and water use, helping sustainable food production and ornamental production meet tightening water regulations.
Crop-Specific Requirements: Flowers vs. Vegetables vs. Cannabis
Flowers often prioritize uniform appearance, stem length, and timing, so automation must support highly consistent climate and irrigation across batches rather than aggressive yield pushing. Many cut flowers and potted ornamentals tolerate moderate VPD (about 0.8–1.2 kPa) and benefit from gentle climate shifts to synchronize flowering.
Fertigation recipes typically focus on steady EC and balanced micronutrients to prevent cosmetic defects like tip burn or color distortion.
Vegetables span leafy greens, fruiting crops, and root vegetables, which creates a broader temperature and light spectrum for automation to manage.
Leafy greens often favor cooler temperatures and moderate light, while tomatoes and cucumbers prefer warmer ranges and more intense light, so multi-zone climate and fertigation control becomes important in commercial growers serving mixed programs.
Automation here should emphasize irrigation efficiency and
nutrient-use efficiency to support sustainable food production at scale.
Cannabis demands the tightest environmental band of the three, with staged humidity (around 75% at the seedling stage and 55–60% in the vegetative and flowering phases) and distinct daylength and
light-intensity requirements for each phase.
Photoperiod management, blackout screens, CO₂ enrichment, and precise fertigation scheduling are central to this, making a
high-resolution automation stack almost mandatory for compliance-grade production.
Comparing Automation Priorities by Crop Type
Dimension | Flowers | Vegetables | Cannabis |
Primary goal | Uniform quality, timing | Yield, quality, food safety | Potency, terpene profile, consistency |
Fertigation focus | Stable EC, cosmetic quality | Water savings, nutrient-use efficiency | Strain-specific recipes, root-zone sensing |
Climate control focus | Gentle temp swings, uniform RH | Crop-specific temps, multi-zone control | Tight RH/VPD, CO₂, photoperiod |
Water treatment role | Disease suppression, re-use where viable | Regulatory compliance, sustainable food production | Contamination control forhigh-value crops |
Automation complexity | Moderate | Moderate–high (multi-crop) | High (regulatory and quality demands) |
These distinctions guide how growers should configure their automation stack in 2026.
Configuring Fertigation for Each Crop Group
A centralized fertigation platform such as Fertigation Manager™ lets growers maintain multiple feed formulas and irrigation schedules in
one system while serving flowers, vegetables, and cannabis simultaneously. For flowers, simpler multi-zone programs with a few EC setpoints and event-based irrigation (time, light sum, or substrate moisture) are often sufficient, provided they support batch uniformity.
Vegetable operations benefit from inline fertigation with recipe libraries for each crop and growth phase, integrated with soil or substrate moisture sensors to avoid over-irrigation and nutrient leaching.
For cannabis, growers often configure more granular zones, wireless root-zone sensors for EC and moisture, and tight irrigation pulsing to maintain oxygenation while delivering accurate daily fertigation volumes.
In all three cases, linking irrigation decisions to real sensor input enhances precision and supports sustainable food production and resource efficiency.
Climate and Water Treatment Strategies by Segment
Climate automation for flowers generally centers on temperature curves, humidity limits, and light management tailored to crop timing, with optional CO₂ enrichment where economics justify it.
Vegetable growers often push higher light hours (up to 14–20 hours per day in controlled environments) for leafy greens and warm, well-ventilated conditions for fruiting crops, making the Climate Manager’s multi-zone scheduling and ventilation control especially valuable.
Cannabis facilities combine strict photoperiod control (e.g., 18–24 hours of light in vegetative, around 12 in flowering), CO₂ enrichment, blackout screens, and low nighttime humidity to prevent botrytis and maintain cannabinoid profiles. Water treatment integrates across all
three crop types through ozone-based sterilization and recycling, reducing disease pressure, lowering fertilizer purchases, and supporting both ornamental and food production in regions with constrained water resources.
For commercial growers planning 2026 investments, building around a unified automation stack tuned for these specific crop needs offers clear gains in yield, quality, and regulatory confidence. Contact us today for real production solutions.