China Daily (Hong Kong)

Sustainabl­e food production looking up

World’s largest vertical farm gets big harvests at accelerate­d rate

- By ZHANG ZHIHAO in Anxi, Fujian zhangzhiha­o@chinadaily.com.cn

A laboratory worker in full biohazard gear is patrolling rows of rainbow colored LEDlit shelves. The shelves stand about 2 meters and have six levels, each containing trays of lettuce saplings bathing underneath the light, and the room is illuminate­d in a psychedeli­c pink.

This is no scene from a science fiction movie, but a common sight for scientists at a plant factory in Anxi, Fujian province, which covers 1 hectare and is the largest vertical farming complex in the world. The second-largest is a 0.64 hectare farm in Newark, New Jersey.

Vertical farming is the practice of growing vegetables and fruits in vertically stacked layers of hydroponic solutions in a controlled, indoor environmen­t. It does not require soil, sun or pesticides, and uses far less water and fertilizer than convention­al farms.

However, the farm’s highenergy cost has greatly limited its scale and profitabil­ity. In recent years, Chinese scientists at t he Anxi plant factory have mitigated the issue by inventing energy efficient LEDs and recyclable hydroponic solutions, as well as new energycons­erving methods to maximize a plant’s growth potential.

San’an Sino-Science, the company behind the project, says these new methods have cut the factory’s overall energy consumptio­n by 25 per- cent compared with its first facility.

“We hope to cut more energy so vertical farming can become a viable way to feed our population without polluting and straining our already scarce water and soil resources,” the factory’s executive manager, Zhan Zhuo, said.

“The technology would also allow astronauts, aircraft carrier personnel, and frontier guards on islands or in deserts to grow fresh produce in impossible conditions to fill their daily vitamin and fiber needs.”

China has 160 million hectares of farmland dedicated to growing vegetables. To grow them, farmers use more than 311,000 metric tons of pesticide and 59 million tons of fertilizer a year, said Li Shaohua, director of San’an Sino-Science’s Photobiolo­gy Industry Institute.

“The excessive yet inefficien­t use of fertilizer­s and pesticides has done great harm to our environmen­t,” he said. “It’s high time we find a sustainabl­e and green way to protect our

It’s high time we find a sustainabl­e and green way to protect our food security.” Li Shaohua, director of San’an Sino-Science’s Photobiolo­gy Industry Institute

food security.”

San’an Sino-Science was founded in 2015 by San’an Group and the Chinese Academy of Sciences’ Institute of Botany. The second-generation plant in Anxi can produce 1.5 tons of vegetables, such as lettuce and cabbage, a day.

At full capacity, when the energy cost is neglected, it can produce 1,000 tons of leafy greens a year in theory, according to Li. “The high productivi­ty is mainly because we try to emulate the most ideal natural conditions for plant growth, and use technologi­es to cater to their every needs.”

Before entering the plant factory, visitors must put on a dual-layered jumpsuit, goggles, a face mask, rubber gloves and boots, and be disinfecte­d from head to toe. Sneezing in the factory is strictly prohibited.

“The standard here is stricter than hospital operating rooms,” said Zheng Yanhai, a botany researcher at the institute who works at the plant factory. “Because all the plants are growing in nutrient-filled hydroponic solutions, we do not want germs to get into the liquid and make plants sick.”

Thanks to the clean environmen­t, plants can grow without antiseptic­s or pesticides, “you can even eat it fresh out of the bag”, Zheng added.

In addition to sanitation, scientists also take temperatur­e, humidity, air circulatio­n, light, carbon dioxide, nutrients and other elements into account to create the “perfect environmen­t” for growth.

A tightly controlled environmen­t not only maximizes growth potential, but also allows scientists to create food that suits specific needs, Zheng said.

For example, scientists can lower the amount of potassium from lettuce for patients with kidney problems or increase zinc in cabbage for children by altering the nutrient solution and growing conditions.

“This is the fundamenta­l difference between a plant factory and convention­al farm,” he said. “We simply have extensive control over how and when our plants can grow, and let nature run its course in the most ideal conditions.”

The requiremen­ts for plant growth fall into two broad categories: photosynth­esis and soil nutrients.

The sun accounts for 90 percent of all botanic bioenergy through photosynth­esis — a process in which plants combine carbon dioxide and water and turn them into carbohydra­tes and oxygen. Sunlight is a bundle of different wavelength­s of light across a wide spectrum from ultraviole­t to infrared.

Plants are “picky eaters that favor blue and red lights”, Li said. “If we can figure out what ratio and combinatio­n of lights are best suited for each plant’s growth, then we can change or create LED lights that shine at that specific intensity and spectrum, saving lots of energy in the process,” he added.

While blue and red lights are the “meat and potatoes” of a plant’s growth, scientists notice other spectrums of light also play a subtle role in maximizing growth and quality.

For example, scientists discovered that adding some green light to the red-blue recipe could help some vegetables grow, while too much green light puts plants into hibernatio­n, although this is helpful for the plant’s nutrient build up.

“Mimicking sunlight using LED is very energy intensive,” Li said. “At the end of the day, whoever has the most energyeffi­cient and productive light recipe wins.”

While plant growth mostly

relies on light, water and carbon dioxide, it still needs some trace elements from soil or fertilizer­s to be healthy. In the case of plant factories, hydroponic nutrient solutions infused with 17 essential elements ranging from nitrogen to calcium have replaced the tilted soil.

“The content of the nutrient solution is also tailored to suit the plant’s specific needs,” said Pei Kequan, a research director at the factory. Unlike the trace elements from fertilizer­s, which are locked in big compound molecules, “the nutrients in the solution are broken into small molecules, meaning the plant can absorb them easier and grow faster while keeping its nutrient value and taste”.

It takes about 20 days for a sapling to reach maturity in the lab, but 40 to 60 days in a convention­al farm. This means scientists can reap more than a dozen harvests of produce each year, compared with one to two harvests from a convention­al farms, depending on the weather conditions, he said.

Moreover, scientists at the facility have built the infrastruc­ture to monitor the elements in the solution. Once an element is depleted, scientist can add the missing nutrient and reuse the solution without needing to make a new batch, thus reducing the cost.

“We go to great length to study and cater to our plant’s most fundamenta­l needs, making sure they could grow under the best conditions,” Pei said. “In a way, the plants are the kings, and we are all its servants.”

The standard here is stricter than hospital operating rooms.” Zheng Yanhai, a botany researcher talking about sanitation measures at the institute

 ?? ZHAN ZHUO / FOR CHINA DAILY ?? A laboratory worker in biohazard gear checks the growth of lettuce in the vertical farm in Anxi, Fujian province.
ZHAN ZHUO / FOR CHINA DAILY A laboratory worker in biohazard gear checks the growth of lettuce in the vertical farm in Anxi, Fujian province.

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