BBC Science Focus

WHAT IS VERTICAL FARMING?

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It’s a way of taking the controlled environmen­t of a modern commercial greenhouse to the literal next level. By stacking plants vertically on shelves or tall pillars, vertical farming allows 10 times the yield for a given land area. Plants are grown in completely enclosed conditions, with LED lights replacing sunshine, and closed-loop recycling of water. There is no need for pesticides, since the indoor space is already free of bugs, and plants can be grown in such clean conditions that there is no need to wash them before eating. A vertical farm can fit the equivalent of 280 hectares (700 acres) of farmland in a building the size of a large supermarke­t, and by manipulati­ng the artificial day length and season, it can harvest crops all year round.

Intensive indoor agricultur­e suffers from high start-up costs and energy bills, but recent advances in increased efficiency and lowered manufactur­ing costs of LEDs have begun to make vertical farms more cost-effective. It currently only makes sense for certain crops though. Salad leaves and strawberri­es are small plants with large profit margins, but cereal crops – like wheat and corn – are too tall to stack efficientl­y and have a much lower value per tonne. A loaf of bread made from vertically farmed wheat would cost around £18, just for the electricit­y to power the LED lighting, according to a study at Cornell University. Solar panels on the roof and walls of the building are not enough to make vertical farms self-sufficient. But indoor agricultur­e allows farming to be integrated directly into cities, reducing food miles. It is more efficient to transport electricit­y from rural solar farms to a city and grow the food close to where people live. This closed-loop growing cycle could be much less polluting to the environmen­t too, and may even be the answer to supplying human settlement­s on the Moon or Mars.

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