Santa Fe New Mexican

Skyscraper farms mark turning point, about to go global

- By Aya Takada

High-rise indoor farms for vegetables are spreading across the world.

In a suburb of Kyoto in Japan, surrounded by technology companies and startups, Spread Co. is preparing to open the world’s largest automated leaf-vegetable factory. It’s the company’s second vertical farm and could mark a turning point for vertical farming — bringing the cost low enough to compete with traditiona­l farms on a large scale.

For decades, vertical farms that grow produce indoors without soil in stacked racks have been touted as a solution to rising food demand in the world’s expanding cities. The problem has always been reproducin­g the effect of natural rain, soil and sunshine at a cost that makes the crop competitiv­e with traditiona­l agricultur­e.

Spread is among a handful of commercial firms that claim to have cracked the problem with a mix of robotics, technology and scale.

Its new facility in Keihanna Science City, known as Japan’s Silicon Valley, will grow 30,000 heads of lettuce a day on racks under custom-designed LED lights. A sealed room protects the vegetables from pests, diseases and dirt. Temperatur­e and humidity are optimized to speed growth of the greens, which are fed, tended and harvested by robots.

“Our system can produce a stable amount of vegetables of a good quality for sale at a fixed price throughout the year, without using pesticides and with no influence from weather,” Spread President Shinji Inada, 58, said in an interview at the company’s existing facility in Kameoka.

Inada won the Edison Award in 2016 for his vertical-farming system. He expects the new factory, called Techno Farm, to more than double the company’s output, generating 1 billion yen in sales a year from growing almost 11 million lettuces.

About 60 percent of indoor-farm operators in Japan are unprofitab­le because of the cost of electricit­y to run their facilities, according to the Japan Greenhouse Horticultu­re Associatio­n. Most others only turn a profit because of government subsidies or by charging a premium to consumers for vegetables that are chemical-free. Spread sells lettuces for 198 yen a head to consumers, about 20 percent to 30 percent more than the normal price for convention­ally grown varieties, according to Inada.

Consumers pay the premium because the pesticide-free vegetables are increasing­ly seen as an alternativ­e to often more expensive organic foods, which must be grown outdoors in soil.

 ?? TOMOHIRO OHSUMI/BLOOMBERG NEWS ?? Spread’s existing facility in Kameoka, Japan.
TOMOHIRO OHSUMI/BLOOMBERG NEWS Spread’s existing facility in Kameoka, Japan.

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