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Vertical farming

Vertical farming is the practice of growing crops in vertically stacked layers.[1][2] It often incorporates controlled-environment agriculture, which aims to optimize plant growth, and soilless farming techniques such as hydroponics, aquaponics, and aeroponics.[1] Some common choices of structures to house vertical farming systems include buildings, shipping containers, tunnels, and abandoned mine shafts. As of 2020, there is the equivalent of about 30 ha (74 acres) of operational vertical farmland in the world.[3]

Vertical farming in Singapore

The modern concept of vertical farming was proposed in 1999 by Dickson Despommier, professor of Public and Environmental Health at Columbia University.[4] Despommier and his students came up with a design of a skyscraper farm that could feed 50,000 people.[5] Although the design has not yet been built, it successfully popularized the idea of vertical farming.[5]

The main advantage of utilizing vertical farming technologies is the increased crop yield that comes with a smaller unit area of land requirement.[6] Another sought-after advantage is the increased ability to cultivate a larger variety of crops at once because crops do not share the same plots of land while growing. Additionally, crops are resistant to weather disruptions because of their placement indoors, meaning fewer crops are lost to extreme or unexpected weather occurrences. Because of its limited land usage, vertical farming is less disruptive to the native plants and animals, leading to further conservation of the local flora and fauna.[7]

These advances have led vertical farming companies to raise unprecedented amounts of funding in North America[8] as well as in other parts of the world such as the Middle East.[9] Today, venture capitalists, governments, financial institutions, and private investors [10] are among the principal investors in the sector. Additionally, vertical farming research in academic institutions faces limited funding opportunities. [11]

Vertical farming technologies face economic challenges with large start-up costs compared to traditional farms. In Victoria, Australia, a "hypothetical 10 level vertical farm" would cost over 850 times more per square meter of arable land than a traditional farm in rural Victoria.[12] Vertical farms also face large energy demands due to the use of supplementary light like LEDs. Moreover, if non-renewable energy is used to meet these energy demands, vertical farms could produce more pollution than traditional farms or greenhouses.

Techniques edit

 
Indoor Hydroponics of Morus, Japan

Hydroponics edit

Hydroponics refers to the technique of growing plants without soil.[13] In hydroponic systems, the roots of plants are submerged in liquid solutions containing macronutrients, such as nitrogen, phosphorus, sulphur, potassium, calcium, and magnesium, as well as trace elements, including iron, chlorine, manganese, boron, zinc, copper, and molybdenum.[13] Additionally, inert (chemically inactive) mediums such as gravel, sand, or expanded clay aggregate are used as soil substitutes to provide support for the roots.[13]

The advantages of hydroponics include the ability to increase yield per area and reduce water usage. A study has shown that, compared to conventional farming, hydroponic farming could increase the yield per area of lettuce by around 11 times while requiring 13 times less water.[14] Due to these advantages, hydroponics is the predominant growing system used in vertical farming.[1]

 
Aquaponics with catfish

Aquaponics edit

The term aquaponics is coined by combining two words: aquaculture, which refers to fish farming, and hydroponics—the technique of growing plants without soil.[15] Aquaponics takes hydroponics one step further by integrating the production of terrestrial plants with the production of aquatic organisms in a closed-loop system that mimics nature itself.[1][15] Nutrient-rich wastewater from the fish tanks is filtered by a solid removal unit and then led to a bio-filter, where toxic ammonia is converted to nutritious nitrate.[15] While absorbing nutrients, the plants then purify the wastewater, which is recycled back to the fish tanks.[1] Moreover, the plants consume carbon dioxide produced by the fish, and water in the fish tanks obtains heat and helps the greenhouse maintain temperature at night to save energy.[15] As most commercial vertical farming systems focus on producing a few fast-growing vegetable crops, aquaponics, which also includes an aquacultural component, is currently not as widely used as conventional hydroponics.[1]

Aeroponics edit

 
Aeroponically-grown chives

The invention of aeroponics was motivated by the initiative of NASA (the National Aeronautical and Space Administration) to find an efficient way to grow plants in space in the 1990s.[1][16] Unlike conventional hydroponics and aquaponics, aeroponics does not require any liquid or solid medium to grow plants.[17] Instead, a liquid solution with nutrients is misted in air chambers where the plants are suspended.[17] By far, aeroponics is the most sustainable soil-less growing technique,[17][1] as it uses up to 90% less water than the most efficient conventional hydroponic systems[1] and requires no replacement of growing medium.[17] Moreover, the absence of growing medium allows aeroponic systems to adopt a vertical design, which further saves energy as gravity automatically drains away excess liquid, whereas conventional horizontal hydroponic systems often require water pumps for controlling excess solution.[17] Currently, aeroponic systems have not been widely applied to vertical farming, but are starting to attract significant attention.[1]

Controlled-environment agriculture edit

Controlled-environment agriculture (CEA) is the modification of the natural environment to increase crop yield or extend the growing season.[18] CEA systems are typically hosted in enclosed structures such as greenhouses or buildings, where control can be imposed on environmental factors including air, temperature, light, water, humidity, carbon dioxide, and plant nutrition.[18] In vertical farming systems, CEA is often used in conjunction with soilless farming techniques such as hydroponics, aquaponics, and aeroponics.[18]

Types edit

Building-based farms edit

 
 
Vertical farm in Moscow[19]

Abandoned buildings are often reused for vertical farming, such as a farm at Chicago called "The Plant", which was transformed from an old meatpacking plant.[20] However, new builds are sometimes also constructed to house vertical farming systems.[citation needed]

Shipping-container vertical farms edit

 
A rack fitted out with hydroponic NFT channels and HortiPower grow-lights for leafy greens

Recycled shipping containers are an increasingly popular option for housing vertical farming systems.[1] The shipping containers serve as standardized, modular chambers for growing a variety of plants,[1] and are often equipped with LED lighting, vertically stacked hydroponics, smart climate controls, and monitoring sensors.[1] Moreover, by stacking the shipping containers, farms can save space even further and achieve higher yield per unit area.[citation needed]

Deep farms edit

A "deep farm" is a vertical farm built from refurbished underground tunnels or abandoned mine shafts.[21] As temperature and humidity underground are generally temperate and constant, deep farms require less energy for heating.[21] Deep farms can also use nearby groundwater to reduce the cost of water supply.[21] Despite low costs, a deep farm can produce seven to nine times more food than a conventional farm above ground on the same area of land,[21] according to Saffa Riffat, chair in Sustainable Energy at the University of Nottingham.[22] Coupled with automated harvesting systems, these underground farms can be fully self-sufficient.[23]

Floating farms edit

Floating platforms and barges have been proposed as sites for vertical farming in urban areas where land is scarce. The ongoing Science Barge project first demonstrated urban hydroponic agriculture in New York City in 2007, including several vertical farming systems.[24][25] A much larger vision of sloped, floating skyscrapers has been proposed for Singapore.[26] In this case, the unusual, angular design is intended to exploit the open space over the water to capture more sunlight.

History edit

Initial propositions edit

Dickson Despommier, professor of Public and Environmental Health at Columbia University, founded the root of the concept of vertical farming.[4] In 1999, he challenged his class of graduate students to calculate how much food they could grow on the rooftops of New York. The students concluded that they could only feed about 1000 people.[5] Unsatisfied with the results, Despommier suggested growing plants indoors instead, on multiple layers vertically.[5] Despommier and his students then proposed a design of a 30-story vertical farm equipped with artificial lighting, advanced hydroponics, and aeroponics[27] that could produce enough food for 50,000 people.[5] They further outlined that approximately 100 kinds of fruits and vegetables would grow on the upper floors while lower floors would house chickens and fish subsisting on the plant waste.[5] Although Despommier's skyscraper farm has not yet been built, it popularized the idea of vertical farming and inspired many later designs.[5] 2017 the design magazine eVolo awarded a farm/school tower design.[28][29]

Implementations edit

Developers and local governments in multiple cities have expressed interest in establishing a vertical farm: Incheon (South Korea), Abu Dhabi (United Arab Emirates), Dongtan (China),[30] New York City, Portland, Los Angeles, Las Vegas,[31] Seattle, Surrey, Toronto, Paris, Bangalore (India), Dubai, Shanghai, and Beijing.[32] Around US$1.8 billion were invested into startups operating in the sector between 2014 and November 2020.[3]

In 2009, Paignton Zoo Environmental Park in the United Kingdom installed the world's first pilot production system. The system displayed vertical farming and provided a reliable foundation to explore sustainable urban food production. The produce generated from the project is utilized to feed the zoo's animals. The project also facilitates the assessment of different systems and serves as an educational tool to encourage a shift from unsustainable land-use practices that adversely affect global biodiversity and ecosystem services.[33]

In 2010, the Green Zionist Alliance proposed a resolution at the 36th World Zionist Congress calling on Keren Kayemet L'Yisrael (Jewish National Fund in Israel) to develop vertical farms in Israel.[34] Moreover, a company named "Podponics" built a vertical farm in Atlanta consisting of over 100 stacked "growpods" in 2010 but reportedly went bankrupt in May 2016.[35]

In 2012, the world's first commercial vertical farm was opened in Singapore, developed by Sky Greens Farms, and is three stories high.[36] They currently have over 100 nine-meter-tall towers.[37] In the same year, a company named The Plant debuted its newly developed vertical farming system housed in an abandoned meatpacking building in Chicago, Illinois.[20] The utilization of abandoned buildings to house vertical farms and other sustainable farming methods are a fact of the rapid urbanization of modern communities.[38]

In 2013, the Association for Vertical Farming (AVF) was founded in Munich (Germany). By May 2015, the AVF had expanded with regional chapters all over Europe, Asia, US, Canada, and the United Kingdom. This organization unites growers and inventors to improve food security and sustainable development. The AVF focuses on advancing vertical farming technologies, designs, and businesses by hosting international info-days, workshops, and summits.[39]

In 2015, the London company, Growing Underground, began the production of leafy green produce underground in abandoned underground World War II tunnels.[40]

In 2016, a startup called Local Roots launched the "TerraFarm",[41] a vertical farming systems hosted in a 40-foot shipping container, which includes computer vision integrated with an artificial neural network to monitor the plants; and is remotely monitored from California.[42] It is claimed that the TerraFarm system "has achieved cost parity with traditional, outdoor farming"[43] with each unit producing the equivalent of "three to five acres of farmland", using 97% less water[44] through water recapture and harvesting the evaporated water through the air conditioning.[45] The first vertical farm in a US grocery store opened in Dallas, Texas in 2016, now closed.[46]

In 2017, a Japanese company, Mirai, began marketing its multi-level vertical farming system. The company states that it can produce 10,000 heads of lettuce a day—100 times the amount that could be produced with traditional agricultural methods because their special purpose LED lights can decrease growing times by a factor of 2.5. Additionally, this can all be achieved with 40% less energy usage, 80% less food waste, and 99% less water usage than in traditional farming methods. Further requests have been made to implement this technology in several other Asian countries.[12] As of 2021, Bowery Farming is the largest indoor vertical farming company in the United States.[47]

Energy costs edit

In 2022, multiple firms reduced their operations (Appharvest, Infarm[48]), or exited the market (Glowfarms), due to rapid increases in energy prices. Firms shifted their focus to regions with severe water constraints and/or lower energy costs.[49] Florida-based Kalera received a delisting notice from NASDAQ. IronOX laid off staff and Fifth Season exited the market. Increased energy costs were frequently cited as a source of problems.[50]

Advantages edit

Efficiency edit

Traditional farming arable land requirements are too large and invasive to remain sustainable for future generations. With the rapid population growth rates, it is expected that arable land per person will drop about 66% in 2050 in comparison to 1970.[12] Vertical farming allows for, in some cases, over ten times the crop yield per acre than traditional methods.[6] Unlike traditional farming in non-tropical areas, indoor farming can produce crops year-round. All-season farming multiplies the productivity of the farmed surface by a factor of four to six, depending on the crop. With crops such as strawberries, the factor may be as high as 30.[51]

Vertical farming also allows for the production of a larger variety of harvestable crops because of its usage of isolated crop sectors. As opposed to a traditional farm where one type of crop is harvested per season, vertical farms allow for a multitude of different crops to be grown and harvested at once due to their individual land plots.[52]

According to the USDA,[53] vertical farm produce only travels a short distance to reach stores compared to traditional farming method produce.

The United States Department of Agriculture predicts the worldwide population to exceed 9 billion by 2050, most of which will be living in urban or city areas. Vertical farming is the USDA's predicted answer to the potential food shortage as the population increases.[53] This method of farming mitigates climate change by lowering emissions[54] and reducing needed water. This type of urban farming that would allow for nearly immediate farm-to-store transport would reduce distribution costs and shorten produce travel time.

In a workshop on vertical farming put on by the USDA and the Department of Energy[55] experts in vertical farming discussed plant breeding, pest management, and engineering. Control of pests (like insects, birds, and rodents) is easily managed in vertical farms because the area is so well-controlled. Without the need for chemical pesticides the ability to grow organic crops is easier than in traditional farming.

Resistance to weather edit

 
Vertical cannabis farming, Alaska

Crops grown in traditional outdoor farming depend on supportive weather and suffer from undesirable temperatures, rain, monsoon, hailstorm, tornado, flooding, wildfires, and drought.[56] "Three recent floods (in 1993, 2007 and 2008) cost the United States billions of dollars in lost crops, with even more devastating losses in topsoil. Changes in rain patterns and temperature could diminish India's agricultural output by 30 percent by the end of the century."[57]

The issue of adverse weather conditions is especially relevant for arctic and sub-arctic areas like Alaska and northern Canada where traditional farming is largely impossible. Food insecurity has been a long-standing problem in remote northern communities where fresh produce has to be shipped large distances resulting in high costs and poor nutrition.[58] Container-based farms can provide fresh produce year-round at a lower cost than shipping in supplies from more southerly locations with a number of farms operating in locations such as Churchill, Manitoba, and Unalaska, Alaska.[59][60] As with disruption to crop growing, local container-based farms are also less susceptible to disruption than the long supply chains necessary to deliver traditionally grown produce to remote communities. Food prices in Churchill spiked substantially after floods in May and June 2017 forced the closure of the rail line that forms the only permanent overland connection between Churchill and the rest of Canada.[61]

Environmental conservation edit

Up to 20 units of outdoor farmland per unit of vertical farming could return to its natural state, due to vertical farming's increased productivity.[62][63] Vertical farming would reduce the amount of farmland, thus saving many natural resources.[32]

Deforestation and desertification caused by agricultural encroachment on natural biomes could be avoided.[64] Producing food indoors reduces or eliminates conventional plowing, planting, and harvesting by farm machinery, protecting soil, and reducing emissions.[51]

Traditional farming is often invasive to the native flora and fauna because it requires such a large area of arable land. One study showed that wood mouse populations dropped from 25 per hectare to 5 per hectare after harvest, estimating 10 animals killed per hectare each year with conventional farming.[65] In comparison, vertical farming would cause nominal harm to wildlife because of its limited space usage.[7]

Problems edit

Economics edit

Vertical farms must overcome the financial challenge of large startup costs. The initial building costs could exceed $100 million for a 60 hectare vertical farm.[66] Urban occupancy costs can be high, resulting in much higher startup costs – and a longer break even time – than for a traditional farm in rural areas.

Opponents question the potential profitability of vertical farming. In order for vertical farms to be successful financially, high-value crops must be grown since traditional farms provide low-value crops like wheat at cheaper costs than vertical farms.[12] Louis Albright, a professor in biological and environmental engineering at Cornell stated that a loaf of bread that was made from wheat grown in a vertical farm would cost US$27.[67] However, according to the US Bureau of Labor Statistics, the average loaf of bread cost US$1.296 in September 2019, clearly showing how crops grown in vertical farms will be noncompetitive compared to crops grown in traditional outdoor farms.[68] In order for vertical farms to be profitable, the costs of operating these farms must decrease or the price of traditional farming must increase. The developers of the TerraFarm system produced from second-hand, 40-foot shipping containers claimed that their system "has achieved cost parity with traditional, outdoor farming".[69]

A theoretical 10-story vertical wheat farm could produce up to 1,940 tons of wheat per hectare compared to a global average of 3.2 tons of wheat per hectare (600 times yield). Current methods require enormous energy consumption for lighting, temperature, humidity control, carbon dioxide input and fertilizer and consequently the authors concluded it was "unlikely to be economically competitive with current market prices".[70]

According to a report in The Financial Times as of 2020, most vertical farming companies have been unprofitable, except for a number of Japanese companies.[3]

Energy use edit

During the growing season, the sun shines on a vertical surface at an extreme angle such that much less light is available to crops than when they are planted on flat land. Therefore, supplemental light would be required. Bruce Bugbee claimed that the power demands of vertical farming would be uncompetitive with traditional farms using only natural light.[71][72] Environmental writer George Monbiot calculated that the cost of providing enough supplementary light to grow the grain for a single loaf would be about $15.[73] An article in the Economist argued that "even though crops growing in a glass skyscraper will get some natural sunlight during the day, it won't be enough" and "the cost of powering artificial lights will make indoor farming prohibitively expensive".[74] Moreover, research in 2007 on the Science Barge urban farming project led Ted Caplow to conclude that "generating enough electricity using solar panels requires an area about 20 times larger than the area being illuminated", which will be hard to accomplish with larger vertical farms.[74] A hydroponic farm growing lettuce in Arizona would require 15,000 kilojoules (4.2 kWh) of energy per kilogram of lettuce produced.[75] To put this amount of energy into perspective, a traditional outdoor lettuce farm in Arizona only requires 1100 kJ of energy per kilogram of lettuce grown.[citation needed]

As the book by Dr. Dickson Despommier The Vertical Farm proposes a controlled environment, heating, and cooling costs will resemble those of any other multiple story building.[76] Plumbing and elevator systems are necessary to distribute nutrients and water. In the northern continental United States, fossil fuel heating costs can be over $200,000 per hectare. Research conducted in 2015 compared the growth of lettuce in Arizona using conventional agricultural methods and a hydroponic farm. They determined that heating and cooling made up more than 80% of the energy consumption in the hydroponic farm, with the heating and cooling needing 7400 kJ per kilogram of lettuce produced.[75] According to the same study, the total energy consumption of the hydroponic farm is 90,000 kJ per kilogram of lettuce. If the energy consumption is not addressed, vertical farms may be an unsustainable alternative to traditional agriculture.[75]

The energy requirements of vertical farming lead to significant land use to provide the energy. For every acre of crops grown via vertical farming, 5.4 acres of solar panels would be required to supply the energy via solar power.[77] Thus in practice, vertical farming may require more land than traditional farming, not less.

Solutions edit

There are a number of interrelated challenges with some potential solutions:

  • Carbon emission: A vertical farm requires a CO2 source, most likely from combustion if colocated with electric utility plants; absorbing CO2 that would otherwise be jettisoned is possible. Greenhouses commonly supplement carbon dioxide levels to 3–4 times the atmospheric rate. This increase in CO2 increases photosynthesis at varying rates, averaging 50%, contributing not only to higher yields but also to faster plant maturation, shrinking of pores, and greater resilience to water stress (both too much and little). Vertical farms need not exist in isolation, hardier mature plants could be transferred to traditional greenhouses, freeing up space and increasing cost flexibility.
  • Crop damage: Some greenhouses burn fossil fuels purely to produce CO2, such as from furnaces, which contain pollutants such as sulphur dioxide and ethylene. These pollutants can significantly damage plants, so gas filtration is a component of high production systems.
  • Light pollution: Greenhouse growers commonly exploit photoperiodism in plants to control whether the plants are in a vegetative or reproductive stage. As part of this control, the lights stay on past sunset and before sunrise or periodically throughout the night. Single story greenhouses have attracted criticism over light pollution, though a typical urban vertical farm may also produce light pollution.[citation needed]
  • Power needs: If power needs are met by fossil fuels, the environmental effect may be a net loss;[78] even building low-carbon capacity to power the farms may not make as much sense as simply leaving traditional farms in place while burning less coal. Louis Albright argued that in a "closed-system urban farming based on electrically generated photosynthetic light", a pound of lettuce would result in 8 pounds of carbon dioxide being produced at a power plant, and 4,000 pounds of lettuce produced would be equivalent to the annual emissions of a family car.[67] He also argues that the carbon footprint of tomatoes grown in a similar system would be twice as big as the carbon footprint of lettuce. However, lettuce produced in a greenhouse that allows for sunlight to reach the crops saw a 300 percent reduction in carbon dioxide emissions per head of lettuce.[67] As vertical farm systems become more efficient in harnessing sunlight, they will produce less pollution.
  • Ventilation: "Necessary" ventilation may allow CO2 to leak into the atmosphere, though recycling systems could be devised. This is not limited to humidity tolerant and humidity intolerant crop polyculture cycling (as opposed to monoculture).
  • Water pollution: Hydroponic greenhouses regularly change the water, producing water containing fertilizers and pesticides that must be disposed of. Spreading the effluent over neighboring farmland or wetlands would be difficult for an urban vertical farm, while water treatment remedies (natural or otherwise) could be part of a solution.

See also edit

References edit

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Web Resouces edit

  • Talking to...Dickson Despommier – Ex nihilo interview with Dr. Dickson Despommier on Vertical Farming.

vertical, farming, examples, perspective, this, article, represent, worldwide, view, subject, improve, this, article, discuss, issue, talk, page, create, article, appropriate, july, 2023, learn, when, remove, this, template, message, practice, growing, crops, . The examples and perspective in this article may not represent a worldwide view of the subject You may improve this article discuss the issue on the talk page or create a new article as appropriate July 2023 Learn how and when to remove this template message Vertical farming is the practice of growing crops in vertically stacked layers 1 2 It often incorporates controlled environment agriculture which aims to optimize plant growth and soilless farming techniques such as hydroponics aquaponics and aeroponics 1 Some common choices of structures to house vertical farming systems include buildings shipping containers tunnels and abandoned mine shafts As of 2020 update there is the equivalent of about 30 ha 74 acres of operational vertical farmland in the world 3 Vertical farming in SingaporeThe modern concept of vertical farming was proposed in 1999 by Dickson Despommier professor of Public and Environmental Health at Columbia University 4 Despommier and his students came up with a design of a skyscraper farm that could feed 50 000 people 5 Although the design has not yet been built it successfully popularized the idea of vertical farming 5 The main advantage of utilizing vertical farming technologies is the increased crop yield that comes with a smaller unit area of land requirement 6 Another sought after advantage is the increased ability to cultivate a larger variety of crops at once because crops do not share the same plots of land while growing Additionally crops are resistant to weather disruptions because of their placement indoors meaning fewer crops are lost to extreme or unexpected weather occurrences Because of its limited land usage vertical farming is less disruptive to the native plants and animals leading to further conservation of the local flora and fauna 7 These advances have led vertical farming companies to raise unprecedented amounts of funding in North America 8 as well as in other parts of the world such as the Middle East 9 Today venture capitalists governments financial institutions and private investors 10 are among the principal investors in the sector Additionally vertical farming research in academic institutions faces limited funding opportunities 11 Vertical farming technologies face economic challenges with large start up costs compared to traditional farms In Victoria Australia a hypothetical 10 level vertical farm would cost over 850 times more per square meter of arable land than a traditional farm in rural Victoria 12 Vertical farms also face large energy demands due to the use of supplementary light like LEDs Moreover if non renewable energy is used to meet these energy demands vertical farms could produce more pollution than traditional farms or greenhouses Contents 1 Techniques 1 1 Hydroponics 1 2 Aquaponics 1 3 Aeroponics 1 4 Controlled environment agriculture 2 Types 2 1 Building based farms 2 2 Shipping container vertical farms 2 3 Deep farms 2 4 Floating farms 3 History 3 1 Initial propositions 3 2 Implementations 3 3 Energy costs 4 Advantages 4 1 Efficiency 4 2 Resistance to weather 4 3 Environmental conservation 5 Problems 5 1 Economics 5 2 Energy use 5 3 Solutions 6 See also 7 References 8 Web ResoucesTechniques edit nbsp Indoor Hydroponics of Morus JapanHydroponics edit Hydroponics refers to the technique of growing plants without soil 13 In hydroponic systems the roots of plants are submerged in liquid solutions containing macronutrients such as nitrogen phosphorus sulphur potassium calcium and magnesium as well as trace elements including iron chlorine manganese boron zinc copper and molybdenum 13 Additionally inert chemically inactive mediums such as gravel sand or expanded clay aggregate are used as soil substitutes to provide support for the roots 13 The advantages of hydroponics include the ability to increase yield per area and reduce water usage A study has shown that compared to conventional farming hydroponic farming could increase the yield per area of lettuce by around 11 times while requiring 13 times less water 14 Due to these advantages hydroponics is the predominant growing system used in vertical farming 1 nbsp Aquaponics with catfishAquaponics edit The term aquaponics is coined by combining two words aquaculture which refers to fish farming and hydroponics the technique of growing plants without soil 15 Aquaponics takes hydroponics one step further by integrating the production of terrestrial plants with the production of aquatic organisms in a closed loop system that mimics nature itself 1 15 Nutrient rich wastewater from the fish tanks is filtered by a solid removal unit and then led to a bio filter where toxic ammonia is converted to nutritious nitrate 15 While absorbing nutrients the plants then purify the wastewater which is recycled back to the fish tanks 1 Moreover the plants consume carbon dioxide produced by the fish and water in the fish tanks obtains heat and helps the greenhouse maintain temperature at night to save energy 15 As most commercial vertical farming systems focus on producing a few fast growing vegetable crops aquaponics which also includes an aquacultural component is currently not as widely used as conventional hydroponics 1 Aeroponics edit nbsp Aeroponically grown chivesThe invention of aeroponics was motivated by the initiative of NASA the National Aeronautical and Space Administration to find an efficient way to grow plants in space in the 1990s 1 16 Unlike conventional hydroponics and aquaponics aeroponics does not require any liquid or solid medium to grow plants 17 Instead a liquid solution with nutrients is misted in air chambers where the plants are suspended 17 By far aeroponics is the most sustainable soil less growing technique 17 1 as it uses up to 90 less water than the most efficient conventional hydroponic systems 1 and requires no replacement of growing medium 17 Moreover the absence of growing medium allows aeroponic systems to adopt a vertical design which further saves energy as gravity automatically drains away excess liquid whereas conventional horizontal hydroponic systems often require water pumps for controlling excess solution 17 Currently aeroponic systems have not been widely applied to vertical farming but are starting to attract significant attention 1 Controlled environment agriculture edit Controlled environment agriculture CEA is the modification of the natural environment to increase crop yield or extend the growing season 18 CEA systems are typically hosted in enclosed structures such as greenhouses or buildings where control can be imposed on environmental factors including air temperature light water humidity carbon dioxide and plant nutrition 18 In vertical farming systems CEA is often used in conjunction with soilless farming techniques such as hydroponics aquaponics and aeroponics 18 Types editBuilding based farms edit nbsp nbsp Vertical farm in Moscow 19 Abandoned buildings are often reused for vertical farming such as a farm at Chicago called The Plant which was transformed from an old meatpacking plant 20 However new builds are sometimes also constructed to house vertical farming systems citation needed Shipping container vertical farms edit nbsp A rack fitted out with hydroponic NFT channels and HortiPower grow lights for leafy greensRecycled shipping containers are an increasingly popular option for housing vertical farming systems 1 The shipping containers serve as standardized modular chambers for growing a variety of plants 1 and are often equipped with LED lighting vertically stacked hydroponics smart climate controls and monitoring sensors 1 Moreover by stacking the shipping containers farms can save space even further and achieve higher yield per unit area citation needed Deep farms edit A deep farm is a vertical farm built from refurbished underground tunnels or abandoned mine shafts 21 As temperature and humidity underground are generally temperate and constant deep farms require less energy for heating 21 Deep farms can also use nearby groundwater to reduce the cost of water supply 21 Despite low costs a deep farm can produce seven to nine times more food than a conventional farm above ground on the same area of land 21 according to Saffa Riffat chair in Sustainable Energy at the University of Nottingham 22 Coupled with automated harvesting systems these underground farms can be fully self sufficient 23 Floating farms edit Floating platforms and barges have been proposed as sites for vertical farming in urban areas where land is scarce The ongoing Science Barge project first demonstrated urban hydroponic agriculture in New York City in 2007 including several vertical farming systems 24 25 A much larger vision of sloped floating skyscrapers has been proposed for Singapore 26 In this case the unusual angular design is intended to exploit the open space over the water to capture more sunlight History editInitial propositions edit Dickson Despommier professor of Public and Environmental Health at Columbia University founded the root of the concept of vertical farming 4 In 1999 he challenged his class of graduate students to calculate how much food they could grow on the rooftops of New York The students concluded that they could only feed about 1000 people 5 Unsatisfied with the results Despommier suggested growing plants indoors instead on multiple layers vertically 5 Despommier and his students then proposed a design of a 30 story vertical farm equipped with artificial lighting advanced hydroponics and aeroponics 27 that could produce enough food for 50 000 people 5 They further outlined that approximately 100 kinds of fruits and vegetables would grow on the upper floors while lower floors would house chickens and fish subsisting on the plant waste 5 Although Despommier s skyscraper farm has not yet been built it popularized the idea of vertical farming and inspired many later designs 5 2017 the design magazine eVolo awarded a farm school tower design 28 29 Implementations edit Developers and local governments in multiple cities have expressed interest in establishing a vertical farm Incheon South Korea Abu Dhabi United Arab Emirates Dongtan China 30 New York City Portland Los Angeles Las Vegas 31 Seattle Surrey Toronto Paris Bangalore India Dubai Shanghai and Beijing 32 Around US 1 8 billion were invested into startups operating in the sector between 2014 and November 2020 3 In 2009 Paignton Zoo Environmental Park in the United Kingdom installed the world s first pilot production system The system displayed vertical farming and provided a reliable foundation to explore sustainable urban food production The produce generated from the project is utilized to feed the zoo s animals The project also facilitates the assessment of different systems and serves as an educational tool to encourage a shift from unsustainable land use practices that adversely affect global biodiversity and ecosystem services 33 In 2010 the Green Zionist Alliance proposed a resolution at the 36th World Zionist Congress calling on Keren Kayemet L Yisrael Jewish National Fund in Israel to develop vertical farms in Israel 34 Moreover a company named Podponics built a vertical farm in Atlanta consisting of over 100 stacked growpods in 2010 but reportedly went bankrupt in May 2016 35 In 2012 the world s first commercial vertical farm was opened in Singapore developed by Sky Greens Farms and is three stories high 36 They currently have over 100 nine meter tall towers 37 In the same year a company named The Plant debuted its newly developed vertical farming system housed in an abandoned meatpacking building in Chicago Illinois 20 The utilization of abandoned buildings to house vertical farms and other sustainable farming methods are a fact of the rapid urbanization of modern communities 38 In 2013 the Association for Vertical Farming AVF was founded in Munich Germany By May 2015 the AVF had expanded with regional chapters all over Europe Asia US Canada and the United Kingdom This organization unites growers and inventors to improve food security and sustainable development The AVF focuses on advancing vertical farming technologies designs and businesses by hosting international info days workshops and summits 39 In 2015 the London company Growing Underground began the production of leafy green produce underground in abandoned underground World War II tunnels 40 In 2016 a startup called Local Roots launched the TerraFarm 41 a vertical farming systems hosted in a 40 foot shipping container which includes computer vision integrated with an artificial neural network to monitor the plants and is remotely monitored from California 42 It is claimed that the TerraFarm system has achieved cost parity with traditional outdoor farming 43 with each unit producing the equivalent of three to five acres of farmland using 97 less water 44 through water recapture and harvesting the evaporated water through the air conditioning 45 The first vertical farm in a US grocery store opened in Dallas Texas in 2016 now closed 46 In 2017 a Japanese company Mirai began marketing its multi level vertical farming system The company states that it can produce 10 000 heads of lettuce a day 100 times the amount that could be produced with traditional agricultural methods because their special purpose LED lights can decrease growing times by a factor of 2 5 Additionally this can all be achieved with 40 less energy usage 80 less food waste and 99 less water usage than in traditional farming methods Further requests have been made to implement this technology in several other Asian countries 12 As of 2021 Bowery Farming is the largest indoor vertical farming company in the United States 47 Energy costs edit In 2022 multiple firms reduced their operations Appharvest Infarm 48 or exited the market Glowfarms due to rapid increases in energy prices Firms shifted their focus to regions with severe water constraints and or lower energy costs 49 Florida based Kalera received a delisting notice from NASDAQ IronOX laid off staff and Fifth Season exited the market Increased energy costs were frequently cited as a source of problems 50 Advantages editEfficiency edit Traditional farming arable land requirements are too large and invasive to remain sustainable for future generations With the rapid population growth rates it is expected that arable land per person will drop about 66 in 2050 in comparison to 1970 12 Vertical farming allows for in some cases over ten times the crop yield per acre than traditional methods 6 Unlike traditional farming in non tropical areas indoor farming can produce crops year round All season farming multiplies the productivity of the farmed surface by a factor of four to six depending on the crop With crops such as strawberries the factor may be as high as 30 51 Vertical farming also allows for the production of a larger variety of harvestable crops because of its usage of isolated crop sectors As opposed to a traditional farm where one type of crop is harvested per season vertical farms allow for a multitude of different crops to be grown and harvested at once due to their individual land plots 52 According to the USDA 53 vertical farm produce only travels a short distance to reach stores compared to traditional farming method produce The United States Department of Agriculture predicts the worldwide population to exceed 9 billion by 2050 most of which will be living in urban or city areas Vertical farming is the USDA s predicted answer to the potential food shortage as the population increases 53 This method of farming mitigates climate change by lowering emissions 54 and reducing needed water This type of urban farming that would allow for nearly immediate farm to store transport would reduce distribution costs and shorten produce travel time In a workshop on vertical farming put on by the USDA and the Department of Energy 55 experts in vertical farming discussed plant breeding pest management and engineering Control of pests like insects birds and rodents is easily managed in vertical farms because the area is so well controlled Without the need for chemical pesticides the ability to grow organic crops is easier than in traditional farming Resistance to weather edit nbsp Vertical cannabis farming AlaskaCrops grown in traditional outdoor farming depend on supportive weather and suffer from undesirable temperatures rain monsoon hailstorm tornado flooding wildfires and drought 56 Three recent floods in 1993 2007 and 2008 cost the United States billions of dollars in lost crops with even more devastating losses in topsoil Changes in rain patterns and temperature could diminish India s agricultural output by 30 percent by the end of the century 57 The issue of adverse weather conditions is especially relevant for arctic and sub arctic areas like Alaska and northern Canada where traditional farming is largely impossible Food insecurity has been a long standing problem in remote northern communities where fresh produce has to be shipped large distances resulting in high costs and poor nutrition 58 Container based farms can provide fresh produce year round at a lower cost than shipping in supplies from more southerly locations with a number of farms operating in locations such as Churchill Manitoba and Unalaska Alaska 59 60 As with disruption to crop growing local container based farms are also less susceptible to disruption than the long supply chains necessary to deliver traditionally grown produce to remote communities Food prices in Churchill spiked substantially after floods in May and June 2017 forced the closure of the rail line that forms the only permanent overland connection between Churchill and the rest of Canada 61 Environmental conservation edit Up to 20 units of outdoor farmland per unit of vertical farming could return to its natural state due to vertical farming s increased productivity 62 63 Vertical farming would reduce the amount of farmland thus saving many natural resources 32 Deforestation and desertification caused by agricultural encroachment on natural biomes could be avoided 64 Producing food indoors reduces or eliminates conventional plowing planting and harvesting by farm machinery protecting soil and reducing emissions 51 Traditional farming is often invasive to the native flora and fauna because it requires such a large area of arable land One study showed that wood mouse populations dropped from 25 per hectare to 5 per hectare after harvest estimating 10 animals killed per hectare each year with conventional farming 65 In comparison vertical farming would cause nominal harm to wildlife because of its limited space usage 7 Problems editEconomics edit Vertical farms must overcome the financial challenge of large startup costs The initial building costs could exceed 100 million for a 60 hectare vertical farm 66 Urban occupancy costs can be high resulting in much higher startup costs and a longer break even time than for a traditional farm in rural areas Opponents question the potential profitability of vertical farming In order for vertical farms to be successful financially high value crops must be grown since traditional farms provide low value crops like wheat at cheaper costs than vertical farms 12 Louis Albright a professor in biological and environmental engineering at Cornell stated that a loaf of bread that was made from wheat grown in a vertical farm would cost US 27 67 However according to the US Bureau of Labor Statistics the average loaf of bread cost US 1 296 in September 2019 clearly showing how crops grown in vertical farms will be noncompetitive compared to crops grown in traditional outdoor farms 68 In order for vertical farms to be profitable the costs of operating these farms must decrease or the price of traditional farming must increase The developers of the TerraFarm system produced from second hand 40 foot shipping containers claimed that their system has achieved cost parity with traditional outdoor farming 69 A theoretical 10 story vertical wheat farm could produce up to 1 940 tons of wheat per hectare compared to a global average of 3 2 tons of wheat per hectare 600 times yield Current methods require enormous energy consumption for lighting temperature humidity control carbon dioxide input and fertilizer and consequently the authors concluded it was unlikely to be economically competitive with current market prices 70 According to a report in The Financial Times as of 2020 update most vertical farming companies have been unprofitable except for a number of Japanese companies 3 Energy use edit During the growing season the sun shines on a vertical surface at an extreme angle such that much less light is available to crops than when they are planted on flat land Therefore supplemental light would be required Bruce Bugbee claimed that the power demands of vertical farming would be uncompetitive with traditional farms using only natural light 71 72 Environmental writer George Monbiot calculated that the cost of providing enough supplementary light to grow the grain for a single loaf would be about 15 73 An article in the Economist argued that even though crops growing in a glass skyscraper will get some natural sunlight during the day it won t be enough and the cost of powering artificial lights will make indoor farming prohibitively expensive 74 Moreover research in 2007 on the Science Barge urban farming project led Ted Caplow to conclude that generating enough electricity using solar panels requires an area about 20 times larger than the area being illuminated which will be hard to accomplish with larger vertical farms 74 A hydroponic farm growing lettuce in Arizona would require 15 000 kilojoules 4 2 kWh of energy per kilogram of lettuce produced 75 To put this amount of energy into perspective a traditional outdoor lettuce farm in Arizona only requires 1100 kJ of energy per kilogram of lettuce grown citation needed As the book by Dr Dickson Despommier The Vertical Farm proposes a controlled environment heating and cooling costs will resemble those of any other multiple story building 76 Plumbing and elevator systems are necessary to distribute nutrients and water In the northern continental United States fossil fuel heating costs can be over 200 000 per hectare Research conducted in 2015 compared the growth of lettuce in Arizona using conventional agricultural methods and a hydroponic farm They determined that heating and cooling made up more than 80 of the energy consumption in the hydroponic farm with the heating and cooling needing 7400 kJ per kilogram of lettuce produced 75 According to the same study the total energy consumption of the hydroponic farm is 90 000 kJ per kilogram of lettuce If the energy consumption is not addressed vertical farms may be an unsustainable alternative to traditional agriculture 75 The energy requirements of vertical farming lead to significant land use to provide the energy For every acre of crops grown via vertical farming 5 4 acres of solar panels would be required to supply the energy via solar power 77 Thus in practice vertical farming may require more land than traditional farming not less Solutions edit This section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed February 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message There are a number of interrelated challenges with some potential solutions Carbon emission A vertical farm requires a CO2 source most likely from combustion if colocated with electric utility plants absorbing CO2 that would otherwise be jettisoned is possible Greenhouses commonly supplement carbon dioxide levels to 3 4 times the atmospheric rate This increase in CO2 increases photosynthesis at varying rates averaging 50 contributing not only to higher yields but also to faster plant maturation shrinking of pores and greater resilience to water stress both too much and little Vertical farms need not exist in isolation hardier mature plants could be transferred to traditional greenhouses freeing up space and increasing cost flexibility Crop damage Some greenhouses burn fossil fuels purely to produce CO2 such as from furnaces which contain pollutants such as sulphur dioxide and ethylene These pollutants can significantly damage plants so gas filtration is a component of high production systems Light pollution Greenhouse growers commonly exploit photoperiodism in plants to control whether the plants are in a vegetative or reproductive stage As part of this control the lights stay on past sunset and before sunrise or periodically throughout the night Single story greenhouses have attracted criticism over light pollution though a typical urban vertical farm may also produce light pollution citation needed Power needs If power needs are met by fossil fuels the environmental effect may be a net loss 78 even building low carbon capacity to power the farms may not make as much sense as simply leaving traditional farms in place while burning less coal Louis Albright argued that in a closed system urban farming based on electrically generated photosynthetic light a pound of lettuce would result in 8 pounds of carbon dioxide being produced at a power plant and 4 000 pounds of lettuce produced would be equivalent to the annual emissions of a family car 67 He also argues that the carbon footprint of tomatoes grown in a similar system would be twice as big as the carbon footprint of lettuce However lettuce produced in a greenhouse that allows for sunlight to reach the crops saw a 300 percent reduction in carbon dioxide emissions per head of lettuce 67 As vertical farm systems become more efficient in harnessing sunlight they will produce less pollution Ventilation Necessary ventilation may allow CO2 to leak into the atmosphere though recycling systems could be devised This is not limited to humidity tolerant and humidity intolerant crop polyculture cycling as opposed to monoculture Water pollution Hydroponic greenhouses regularly change the water producing water containing fertilizers and pesticides that must be disposed of Spreading the effluent over neighboring farmland or wetlands would be difficult for an urban vertical farm while water treatment remedies natural or otherwise could be part of a solution See also edit nbsp Gardening portal nbsp Architecture portal nbsp Wikiversity has learning resources about Domestic house food production system Arcology Type of design principles for human habitats Development supported agriculture Folkewall Foodscaping Ornamental landscaping with edible plants Green wall Wall or vertical structure covered by living vegetation and growth substrate Pot farming Terrace agriculture Terrace gardening and Terrace building Urban agriculture Urban horticultureReferences edit a b c d e f g h i j k l m Birkby Jeff January 2016 Vertical Farming ATTRA Sustainable Agriculture Program Retrieved 6 February 2022 Van Gerrewey Thijs Boon Nico Geelen Danny 2022 Vertical Farming The Only Way Is Up Agronomy 12 1 2 doi 10 3390 agronomy12010002 a b c Terazono Emiko 31 October 2020 Vertical farming hope or hype Financial Times Retrieved 7 November 2020 a b Dickson Despommier Columbia University Mailman School of Public Health www mailman columbia edu Retrieved 4 November 2019 a b c d e f g Cooper Arnie 14 June 2017 Going Up Vertical Farming in High Rises Raises Hopes Pacific Standard Retrieved 4 November 2019 a b Indoor farming and outdoor farming average yield per acre worldwide 2015 Statista Retrieved 7 November 2019 a b Navarro Laetitia M Pereira Henrique M 1 September 2012 Rewilding Abandoned Landscapes in Europe Ecosystems 15 6 900 912 doi 10 1007 s10021 012 9558 7 ISSN 1435 0629 Little Leaf Farms Banks a USD 300 Million Funding iGrow News 16 June 2022 Retrieved 14 August 2022 Pure Harvest Smart Farm Nets a USD 180 5 Million Funding Round iGrow News July 2022 Retrieved 14 August 2022 PitchBook Data Show VC Backs Vertical Farming iGrow News 7 June 2022 Retrieved 14 August 2022 Beacham Andrew M Vickers Laura H Monaghan James M 4 May 2019 Vertical farming a summary of approaches to growing skywards The Journal of Horticultural Science and Biotechnology 94 3 277 283 doi 10 1080 14620316 2019 1574214 ISSN 1462 0316 S2CID 91868788 a b c d Benke Kurt Tomkins Bruce 1 January 2017 Future food production systems vertical farming and controlled environment agriculture Sustainability Science Practice and Policy 13 1 13 26 doi 10 1080 15487733 2017 1394054 a b c Resh Howard M 19 April 2016 Hydroponic food production a definitive guidebook for the advanced home gardener and the commercial hydroponic grower Seventh ed Boca Raton FL ISBN 9781439878699 OCLC 823654700 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Lages Barbosa Guilherme Almeida Gadelha Francisca Daiane Kublik Natalya Proctor Alan Reichelm Lucas Weissinger Emily Wohlleb Gregory M Halden Rolf U June 2015 Comparison of Land Water and Energy Requirements of Lettuce Grown Using Hydroponic vs Conventional Agricultural Methods International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 12 6 6879 6891 doi 10 3390 ijerph120606879 ISSN 1661 7827 PMC 4483736 PMID 26086708 a b c d Kledal Paul Rye 2018 Hai Faisal I Visvanathan Chettiyappan Boopathy Ramaraj eds Sustainable Aquaculture Applied Environmental Science and Engineering for a Sustainable Future Springer International Publishing pp 173 190 ISBN 9783319732565 Progressive Plant Growing Has Business Blooming PDF NASA Spinoff 64 67 2016 a b c d e Mytton Mills Helen 2018 Reimagining Resources to Build Smart Futures An Agritech Case Study of Aeroponics in Dastbaz Mohammad Naude Wim Manoochehri Jamileh eds Smart Futures Challenges of Urbanisation and Social 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Botanic Gardens Congress Green Zionist Alliance GZA Bold Resolutions for 36th World Zionist Congress Green Prophet Impact News for the Middle East 1 June 2010 Retrieved 8 November 2019 Bloom to bust The birth and death of Atlanta startup PodPonics Atlanta Business Chronicle Retrieved 8 November 2019 First commercial vertical farm opens in Singapore Channel NewsAsia 27 October 2012 Archived from the original on 27 October 2012 Retrieved 8 November 2019 Urban farming looking up in Singapore CNN 10 December 2012 Retrieved 8 November 2019 Meghna 20 June 2017 Vertical Farms in Cities are the Future of Urban Farming Evolving Science Retrieved 8 November 2019 AGRITECTURE Vertical Farming Technology Trends 11 June 2015 Archived from the original on 11 June 2015 Retrieved 8 November 2019 Growing Underground farms greens in forgotten tunnels below London New Atlas 3 July 2015 Retrieved 8 November 2019 Platt Heather 10 May 2016 Could the Future of Urban Agriculture Be Located Inside a Vernon 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Emerging Tech Brew Retrieved 17 February 2023 a b Rationale for Vertical Farms www verticalfarm com Retrieved 7 November 2019 Sarkar Amaresh December 2015 Opportunities and Challenges in Sustainability of Vertical Eco Farming A Review PDF Journal of Advanced Agricultural Technologies Retrieved 28 October 2019 a b Vertical Farming for the Future www usda gov Retrieved 17 July 2021 Stein Eric W 1 January 2021 The Transformative Environmental Effects Large Scale Indoor Farming May Have On Air Water and Soil Air Soil and Water Research 14 1178622121995819 doi 10 1177 1178622121995819 ISSN 1178 6221 Innovation and Design in Vertical Agriculture and Sustainable Urban Ecosystems USDA REE www ree usda gov The Vertical Farm Essay 1 July 2009 Archived from the original on 1 July 2009 Retrieved 8 November 2019 Pollan Michael 9 September 2009 Opinion Big Food vs Big Insurance The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved 8 November 2019 Food insecurity in Nunavut should be considered a national crisis expert says CBC 19 May 2017 Retrieved 8 November 2019 Macintosh Cameron 20 March 2018 Hydroponic produce is blooming in Churchill Man CBC Retrieved 8 November 2019 DeGeorge Krestia 16 March 2018 How farms in a box have begun to transform the way Arctic residents get vegetables ArcticToday Retrieved 8 November 2019 Grabish Austin 12 June 2017 Churchill residents face rising cost of food after rail line suspended CBC Retrieved 8 October 2019 Despommier Dickson D 23 August 2009 Opinion A Farm on Every Floor The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved 8 November 2019 Vertical take off PDF Fresh Produce Journal 28 January 2011 Encroachment PDF Vermont Department of Environmental Conservation January 2017 Davis S L 2001 The least harm principle suggests that humans should eat beef lamb dairy not a vegan diet Proceedings of the Third Congress of the European Society for Agricultural and Food Ethics 449 450 Starting a Commercial Greenhouse Business 24 October 2005 Archived from the original on 24 October 2005 Retrieved 8 November 2019 a b c Indoor urban farms called wasteful pie in the sky Cornell Chronicle Retrieved 8 November 2019 Notice Data not available U S Bureau of Labor Statistics data bls gov Retrieved 8 November 2019 Gitig Diana 16 December 2017 Local Roots Farm in a box coming to a distribution center near you Ars Technica Retrieved 1 November 2019 Asseng Senthold Guarin Jose R Raman Mahadev Monje Oscar Kiss Gregory Despommier Dickson D Meggers Forrest M Gauthier Paul P G 11 August 2020 Wheat yield potential in controlled environment vertical farms Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 117 32 19131 19135 Bibcode 2020PNAS 11719131A doi 10 1073 pnas 2002655117 PMC 7430987 PMID 32719119 Nelson Bryn 12 December 2007 Could vertical farming be the future Nelson B 2008 NBC News Retrieved 10 November 2010 Roach J 30 June 2009 High Rise Farms The Future of Food National Geographic News Archived from the original on 4 July 2009 Towering Lunacy George Monbiot 16 August 2010 Retrieved 8 November 2019 a b Does it really stack up The Economist 11 December 2010 ISSN 0013 0613 Retrieved 8 November 2019 a b c Stoessel Franziska Juraske Ronnie Pfister Stephan Hellweg Stefanie 20 March 2012 Life Cycle Inventory and Carbon and Water FoodPrint of Fruits and Vegetables Application to a Swiss Retailer Environmental Science amp Technology 46 6 3253 3262 Bibcode 2012EnST 46 3253S doi 10 1021 es2030577 ISSN 0013 936X PMC 3394405 PMID 22309056 Despommier Dickson D 2011 The vertical farm feeding the world in the 21st century Picador ISBN 9780312610692 OCLC 827058703 Tom Gibson Room to Grow ASEE Prism vol 27 no 7 2018 pp 26 31 Does it really stack up The Economist 11 December 2010 ISSN 0013 0613 Retrieved 8 November 2019 Web Resouces editTalking to Dickson Despommier Ex nihilo interview with Dr Dickson Despommier on Vertical Farming Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Vertical farming amp oldid 1199115048, wikipedia, wiki, book, 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