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Drip solution · Tomato

Drip Irrigation for Tomato — greenhouse and open-field

A complete drip-irrigation solution for commercial tomato production — pressure-compensated driplines, fertigation heads, filtration, pump duty and controls, sized for indeterminate greenhouse tomato on substrate as well as processing and fresh-market open-field tomato blocks.

Hydroponic tomato rows with drip-to-slab irrigation in a modern greenhouse

Typical design envelope

Reference parameters used to open the RFQ. Final values are sized by our engineers against source-water, soil and crop stage.

Emitter spacing
20–30 cm greenhouse · 30–40 cm open-field
Emitter flow
1.0–2.0 L/h pressure-compensated
Peak crop water demand (ETc)
5–8 mm/day open-field, 4–6 mm/day greenhouse
Fertigation EC / pH
EC 2.5–3.5 mS/cm · pH 5.5–6.2
Filtration
120 mesh disc + sand filter (raw source-water)
Typical block
1–50 ha open-field · 0.5–10 ha greenhouse

System components

Driplines

Thin-wall PC drip tape for seasonal open-field blocks; heavy-wall PC driplines for multi-season and greenhouse installations.

Fertigation head

Dosing pumps, mixing tanks and EC/pH probes for balanced N-P-K + micronutrients through the season.

Filtration & backflush

Automatic disc or screen filters plus a hydrocyclone or sand filter where source-water is loaded.

Pumping & pressure control

Booster pump with VFD sized to peak block flow and pressure-regulated submains.

Controls & scheduling

Multi-station controller with soil-moisture or ET-based scheduling and remote monitoring.

Why drip for tomato

  • 30–50% water savings vs sprinkler with higher marketable yield.
  • Uniform emitter discharge protects against blossom-end rot and cracking.
  • Precise fertigation reduces fertilizer cost per kg of fruit produced.
  • Compatible with plastic mulch, black polyethylene and greenhouse substrates.

FAQ

Do I need drip-to-slab or soil-grown drip?
Drip-to-slab with rockwool or coco substrate is standard for high-tech greenhouse tomato with recirculation; soil-grown drip is used for tunnel houses and open-field blocks.
What is the typical CAPEX for a hectare of tomato drip?
Depends on block layout, source-water quality and control level. The RFQ returns firm price ranges from qualified global manufacturers with vendor-neutral specification.
Can financing cover drip and fertigation together?
Yes — driplines, fertigation heads, filtration, pumping and installation are all eligible for trade finance and equipment leasing through our pre-qualifier.

Ready to source a tomato drip system?

A dedicated sourcing specialist opens your RFQ to qualified global manufacturers — driplines, fertigation, filtration, pumps and controls — and returns side-by-side offers.

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