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Manufacturing

East Yorkshire firm CambridgeHOK wages war on deadly tomato virus

Tomato brown rugose fruit virus (ToBRFV) was first identified in Israel in 2014, but has since spread to Europe, East Asia and the USA

Phil Pearson, group development director at APS Group

Innovative East Yorkshire engineering specialist CambridgeHOK is helping to stem the spread of a virus which is threatening the global tomato industry.

Tomato brown rugose fruit virus (ToBRFV) was first identified in Israel in 2014, but has since spread to Europe, East Asia and the USA.

The disease can quickly render whole tomato crops unmarketable as infected fruit develop chlorotic marbling and brown rugose patches. 

Once the symptoms are detected, the grower has no option but to destroy the crop in a bid to try to contain the outbreak.

But East Yorkshire-based CambridgeHOK is giving hope to the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ’s tomato growers with an innovative solution it has devised alongside one of the sector’s biggest producers.

The company, which is based in Newport, near Hull, has designed and built a steam sterilisation unit which is helping º£½ÇÊÓÆµ-leading tomato supplier APS Group to minimise the risk of ToBRFV and protect its future crops.

CambridgeHOK's steam sterilisation unit(Image: Nick Glaves)

Ross Hibbs, commercial director of Cambridge HOK, has played a major role in the project.

He said: “ToBRFV is a huge problem for tomato growers. It has the potential to devastate crops very quickly and it can remain in leaf debris, seeds and soil for months, meaning it is incredibly difficult to get rid of.