Vertical Farming

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📺 This vertical farm is growing food—but it's for cows

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Submitted by Elsewhere on 2020-Nov-10 Tue 12:15
2020-Nov-10 Tue 12:15
2104

We use an exceptional amount of land to grow food for cows. Vertical farms could change that, if we used them to grow cow feed. This vertical farm is ...

Off the Wall: Your Produce is Growing in Aisle 5. Vertical Farming Has Arrived

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Submitted by Elsewhere on 2020-Nov-08 Sun 15:14
2020-Nov-08 Sun 15:14
2074

The first thing that comes to mind when you think about the produce section in your grocery store: Is 1: that it's freezing cold, which means you immediately run to the pantry aisle after grabbing your veggies and 2: I wonder where my fruit and vegetables are coming from? Do you ever think about the impact the produce section has on our environment and health? Every item goes through an extensive amount of work to grow, package, transport, and unpack the fruits and vegetables which are most likely sprayed with pesticides.

Developing and improving productivity in vertical farms

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Submitted by Elsewhere on 2020-Nov-06 Fri 10:57
2020-Nov-06 Fri 10:57
2070

Growing food in our increasingly variable climate is a challenge.

Growing crops in a controlled environment provides an alternative approach to conventional farming which is free from the pressures created by extremes and variations in our weather, isolated from pests, and allows crop growth at a wider range of latitudes.

Vertical farming is a relatively recent development with the first commercial vertical farm being reported as developed in 2012 in Singapore. Grand View Research estimated that the value of the vertical farming market would reach almost US$10 by 2025.

Developing indoor vertical farms requires a good understanding of all the requirements each crop plant will need for optimal growth and development. As a relatively new technology, research can have a big impact on how successful these enterprises will be in the longer term with expertise in plant physiology supporting improvements to these systems.

 

Why this First Nation bought a shipping container during COVID-19

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Submitted by Elsewhere on 2020-Oct-28 Wed 07:43
2020-Oct-28 Wed 07:43
1961

The first frosts have already arrived in Ontario, but in Sheshegwaning First Nation, a small community on the western edge of Manitoulin Island, April Folz is still awaiting the first harvest of the year. In about a week, Folz says, the community will have fresh produce: “Monte Carlo romaine lettuce,…

Growing up: Vertical farming makes the most of limited space

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Submitted by Elsewhere on 2020-Oct-28 Wed 07:42
2020-Oct-28 Wed 07:42
1962

To increase agricultural yields, a CALS horticultural scientist and his students are literally looking up. They want to know if growing plants indoors in vertically stacked layers could be part of the solution to feeding a fast-growing world population as farmland becomes scarcer. Ricardo Hernandez, a…

Europe's Green Deal offshores environmental damage to other nations

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Submitted by Elsewhere on 2020-Oct-26 Mon 09:18
2020-Oct-26 Mon 09:18
1927

Indoor farming technologies, such as growing food vertically, are also ripe for development. Although these methods are not yet able to produce staple ...

Can vertical farming grow beyond herbs and leaves?

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Submitted by Elsewhere on 2020-Oct-20 Tue 09:36
2020-Oct-20 Tue 09:36
1861

In the early 20th century German-Jewish scientist Fritz Haber and his colleague Carl Bosch worked out a way to synthesise ammonia, making it possible to create industrial amounts of fertiliser for the first time. It’s said that two out of five humans on the planet today owe their existence to the…

New OEM-agreement for shelf-and-lighting panels for vertical farming

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Submitted by Elsewhere on 2020-Oct-20 Tue 09:35
2020-Oct-20 Tue 09:35
1862

Senmatic and LED iBond International have entered a strategic partnership for OEM delivery of shelves with built-in grow light to be included in Senmatic’s offering of industrial vertical farming solutions. The new vertical farming shelves are based on LED iBond’s patented lighting fixture, which…

PhD opportunity: Vertical farming around the clock

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Submitted by Elsewhere on 2020-Oct-14 Wed 12:58
2020-Oct-14 Wed 12:58
1803

Vertical farming involves plant growth in stacked indoor facilities that often use artificial lighting and soilfree cultivation methods. We invite applications to a PhD studentship at the John Innes Centre investigating the impact of the circadian regulation of plant metabolism upon vertical farming. The project will use fundamental science to investigate the role of circadian regulation in the molecules that are exuded by crops into the irrigation systems. This is a BBSRC NRPDTP-funded CASE studentship, based in the laboratory of Antony Dodd and co-supervised by Anne Osbourn, in collaboration with vertical agriculture R&D company LettUs Grow.

The project will combine fundamental research into circadian regulation of the plant genome and metabolism at the John Innes Centre with experimentation in the experimental vertical farm environment at LettUs Grow. The project has the long-term goal of providing benefits to the vertical farming business whilst making new discoveries and the frontiers of knowledge of the daily co-ordination of plant metabolism. The project is likely to suit a student with interests in gene regulation, metabolism and bioinformatics.

How An Indoor Farm Is Redefining Local

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Submitted by Elsewhere on 2020-Oct-12 Mon 12:17
2020-Oct-12 Mon 12:17
1780

Washington D.C. sits at the intersection of some of the best farming areas in the country. According to the 2017 United States Census of Agriculture, there are over 53,000 farms in Pennsylvania plus another 40,000+ farms in Virginia. Yet, for all of the area’s agrarian prowess, you may not have seen a farm quite like this.

Standing in front of Bowery Farming’s newest farm, located just outside of Baltimore in Nottingham, you could easily mistake it for a shipping warehouse. But, like most good things, it’s what’s on the inside that counts.

Bowery is an indoor, vertical farming company. Walking into its Nottingham Farm feels a bit like stepping into the greenest library you could imagine. Rows and rows of fresh lettuces and herbs stretch towards the ceiling, where they’re nourished under LEDs and a constant, carefully controlled amount of filtered water and essential nutrients. 

Vertical Farming in a Nordic Context

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Submitted by Elsewhere on 2020-Oct-12 Mon 12:12
2020-Oct-12 Mon 12:12
1771

The Association for Vertical Farming is part of the “Vertical Farming in a Nordic Context” conference in Copenhagen. The conference will gather industry, policy and academic stakeholders with the aim of increasing cooperation and accelerating the development of the vertical farming sector in Scandinavia.

Vertical farming is an innovative way of producing fresh food close to consumers with minimal consumption of water and no use of pesticides. In Nordic countries, the interest for vertical farming is currently growing and new farms are established at an increasing rate. To further strengthen this production form in a Nordic context, the Innovation Network for Bioresources, Food & Bio Cluster Denmark and the University of Copenhagen are hosting a conference on vertical farming on November 13th 2020. At the conference, you will meet speakers with hands-on knowledge, business developers, researchers and authorities. We encourage vertical farmers, the agricultural industry, the scientific community, policymakers, authorities and everyone with an interest in vertical farming to participate in the conference to build networks and share knowledge.

CNBC takes a look at the future of vertical farming

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Submitted by Elsewhere on 2020-Oct-10 Sat 00:49
2020-Oct-10 Sat 00:49
1766

Irving Fain, Bowery Farming founder and CEO, and Hans Tung, GGV Capital managing partner and a Bowery Farming investor, join ‘Closing Bell’ to discuss the future of vertical farming, the IPO market and ByteDance

A peek inside the 'farm of the future'

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Submitted by Elsewhere on 2020-Oct-07 Wed 08:50
2020-Oct-07 Wed 08:50
1714

From the outside, the gray and white warehouse near the corner of Oris Street and Mona Boulevard seems like a thousand other mundane Southern California buildings. But the interior, once completed, will resemble a sketch from a futurist's daydreams. If all goes well, the 95,000-square-foot Compton…

For food and security in the UAE, think local

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Submitted by Elsewhere on 2020-Oct-06 Tue 12:32
2020-Oct-06 Tue 12:32
1693

Speaking at a recent meeting of the UAE cabinet, His Highness Sheikh Mohammad bin Rashid Al Maktoum, Vice President, Prime Minister and Ruler of Dubai, emphasised the need for action on greater food and water security as a matter of national priority. Sharing his vision for a more resilient and self-sufficient UAE in the post-COVID-19 period, Sheikh Mohammad instructed the Minister of State for Food Security, to explore technologies and international partnerships, to implement practical solutions.

The disruption of global supply chains, in the aftermath of the COVID-19 pandemic, has caused nations to reassess their vulnerabilities, all across the globe. Before the crisis, the well-oiled machine of global trade had become a reliable source of produce, from distant countries of origin. However, with several primary producers limiting their exports for fear of running out of their reserve stocks of food, nations with limited arable land have had to reconsider their dependence on the global market.

Horticulture 4.0: The Plant Factories For Agricultural Exports

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Submitted by Elsewhere on 2020-Oct-06 Tue 01:19
2020-Oct-06 Tue 01:19
1677

Twenty five years back, we launched a communications revolution, bypassing the land-based telephony technology. India jumped to move into a satellite based cellular Technology. Today, we have a mobile subscriber base of over one billion compared to 33 million land- based connections at its peak. The low cost of mobile telephony has enabled even the rural poor to take advantage. The same technological revolution, which jumps several stages at one time is required in agricultural sector if we desire to reach and even exceed our export targets..

In the recent past, with every VUCA event such as Covid-19, the most affected economy is rural. Not only migrant remittances dried, they returned home to put an additional pressure on household resources. Rural supply chains have taken a hit and the households further pushed into indebtedness. These setbacks are in addition to the usual cycle of flood and drought. This needs re-thinking.

Optimising plant growth in vertical farms

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Submitted by Elsewhere on 2020-Oct-05 Mon 13:33
2020-Oct-05 Mon 13:33
1667

In the video below, Lisanne Meulendijks, Researcher at Delphy Improvement Centre, Mike Zelkind, Cofounder and CEO of 80 Acres Farms and Mariska Dreschler discuss the latest insights in vertical farming.  Source: Greentech.

@LettUsGrow: How does indoor farming work?

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Submitted by Elsewhere on 2020-Oct-05 Mon 03:30
2020-Oct-05 Mon 03:30
1651

How does indoor farming work?

How can it supplement outdoor growing?

Find out by reading our latest blog on the different kinds of controlled environment agriculture & how it's used to grow crops: lettusgrow.com/blog/what-is-i…

We love delivering quality crops with pesticides, berry much indeed. 🍓

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Submitted by Elsewhere on 2020-Oct-02 Fri 08:47
2020-Oct-02 Fri 08:47
1643

We love delivering quality crops with pesticides, berry much indeed. 🍓

Learn more: iagri-tech.com #sustainableFood #verticalfarming #strawberries #nopesticides pic.twitter.com/2dTt1RhJdg

 

Are vertical farms the future of urban food?

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Submitted by Elsewhere on 2020-Oct-01 Thu 10:43
2020-Oct-01 Thu 10:43
1621

Financial and environmental pressures on modern agriculture have sparked new interest in vertical farming. With global population expected to exceed 9 billion by 2050, competition for land to grow both food and energy crops will become increasingly fierce theguardian.com/environment/20…

The vaults rose up as high as the city walls, bearing reeds richly bedded in bitumen and gypsum. The layered galleries peered each beyond its neighbour to reach the sunlight, and water drawn from the river was pumped through conduits up to the highest level. The topsoil was thick enough to root even the largest trees...

These were the renowned Hanging Gardens of Babylon, as described by the Greek historians Diodorus and Callisthenes, and the earliest example of vertical farming – at least according to Dan Caiger-Smith. His company, Valcent, is taking the concept into the 21st century, recently launching the first farm of its kind at Paignton Zoo in Devon.

Tecnova promotes the development of greenhouses for intensive crops in urban environments

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Submitted by Elsewhere on 2020-Sep-29 Tue 09:43
2020-Sep-29 Tue 09:43
1583

The Tecnova Technological Center is working with the Novagric, Polímero Gestión Industrial, Alarcontrol, and Induser companies in the Greendomo project to develop an intensive production system for urban cultivation so as to provide consumers with local, fresh, and residue-free products. Tecnova's…