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Over the past decade, verticalfarming has been touted as just such a disruptor in agriculture. More crops, longer shelf life, no pesticides, fewer bacteria, less land, 99% less water, climate independent. The Emergence of VerticalFarming Top News Headlines About VerticalFarms 01.01.11 to 01.01.22.
Verticalfarming has taken cities by storm, enabling urbanites to grow produce within their own homes and entrepreneurs to meet the growing demand for fresher and higher quantities of locally-grown produce. But, how is this soilless farming technique impacting human health? #1:
With over 20 years of experience working in all facets of agriculture, Agritecture’s Lead Agronomist, David Ceaser , adds that “many people think that verticalfarms are inherently safer than conventional farms regarding food safety - but this is not automatically the case. Here, technology plays a key role.
Urban Greens is a verticalfarming facility located in Sydney, Australia. With this urban surge, the importance of locally sourced produce becomes paramount, prompting a shift towards innovative and efficient solutions such as verticalfarming. So, what are the foremost farms currently growing in this region?
Verticalfarms and greenhouses are seeing much more capital investment than they had in the past, and CEA businesses are improving their unit economics through new technologies which attract investment, as well. Many investments come from venture capitalists who want to treat verticalfarming like a tech investment.
A Bigger Conversation’s Director, Pat Thomas, shares insights from the ‘Agroecological Intelligence’ project, which spoke with agroecological farmers and growers to establish a criteria for adopting new technologies. This complexity makes defining criteria for agroecologically appropriate technologies challenging.
A worker replants lettuce in a verticalfarm. Discussions around labor development, technology innovation, and industry movement appear to be the most engaging. Is Cold Plasma the Next Big Technology Breakthrough in Indoor Ag? Two workers inspect plants in a verticalfarm. Credit: Wikimedia Commons.
However, in the face of these limitations, Singapore has and will embrace more urban and verticalfarming. By maximizing its limited land resources and leveraging cutting-edge technology, Singapore is harnessing the potential of controlled environment agriculture to cultivate a sustainable and self-sufficient future.
Container farms, as the name suggests, are farms that are housed within repurposed metal shipping containers. These containers are retrofitted with equipment and technology to create a controlled environment for plants to grow. A worker tends to plants in a container farm at Vertical Roots farm.
And because they grow quickly with minimal resources—and without herbicides or pesticides—scientists point to their potential to help bolster nutritional security, hedge against disruptions in the food supply chain and even generate fresh produce on long-term space missions.
Credit: VerticalFarming Planet. For millions of Africans, decades of reliance on traditional farming techniques and poor policymaking have created vulnerabilities that are only worsened by the impacts of climate change and natural disasters. One of Africa's most prominent and perhaps persistent challenges is food security.
More than just an explicit set of production practices, this way of farming is known as “agroecology”, and refers to working with, rather than against, nature. Agrivoltaics Jack’s Solar Farm – Photo by Werner Slocum: NREL Agrivoltaics involves field farmers adding solar panels on top of their fields.
He manipulates weather patterns to bring on drought and extreme temperatures, summons pests that are resistant to pesticides, and degrades the soil. His nemesis is HarvestHero, who’s abilities include advanced biologicals and futuristic farming. HarvestHero is winning, barely. anyone who eats!) Crops take time to grow.
The term is meant to capture the nuance between different agricultural methods that are often promoted as competing against each other, [such as verticalfarms and greenhouses,] when in fact, they overlap, and various combinations of them can reap greater environmental, economic, and social benefits than any one solution alone.
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