USA TODAY US Edition

Younger Musk trying to reboot food system

Elon’s brother, Kimbal, brings farms to the city to teach entreprene­urship

- USA TODAY Zlati Meyer

NEW YORK – In sunny California, Elon Musk is upending America’s auto and space industries. And here, in a cold, gritty section of Brooklyn, his brother Kimbal has embarked on a project that’s just as significan­t in its own way: Trying to reboot the food system.

The younger Musk is the co-founder of Square Roots, an urban farming incubator with the goal of teaching young people how to farm in cities while preaching the importance of locally sourced, nonprocess­ed food.

Having shown its potential during the past two years in the parking lot of a shuttered factory near public housing projects of Brooklyn’s Bedford-Stuyvesant, Square Roots is ready to branch out. It is looking to set up plots — each the equivalent of 2 acres of farmland — in cities across the U.S. They’re hydroponic, which means the crops grow in a nutrient-laced water solution, not soil.

The sites in contention are in Chicago, Denver, Memphis, Indianapol­is, Pittsburgh, Boston, Detroit, Los Angeles, Tampa, Atlanta, Dallas, Cincinnati, St. Louis, Washington and a second site in New York. Musk and Square Roots CEO Tobias Peggs will narrow the list to 10 later this year.

In Brooklyn, budding agricultur­al entreprene­urs set up year-round farms inside 10 retired metal ocean shipping containers and grow crops like microgreen­s, herbs and strawberri­es.

“I want them to get to know entreprene­urship through food,” Musk, who counts both growing business and food as big passions, said in a phone interview.

In 2004, Musk co-founded The Kitchen Restaurant Group, which opened eateries in Colo- rado, Tennessee, Illinois and Indiana. Musk, who sits on the board of directors of his brother’s electric car and solar power provider maker Tesla, also co-founded Big Green, an organizati­on that installs gardens in underserve­d schools and teaches children about the importance of eating natural food.

With so much on his plate, Musk leaves the day-to-day running of Square Roots to Peggs. They usually talk twice a day, Peggs said. The two met while working at OneRiot, a social media target-advertisin­g company in Colorado, which Walmart acquired in 2011. Peggs has a doctorate from Cardiff University in Wales in artificial intelligen­ce but can just as easily talk about freshly-picked peppery arugula.

“By 2050, there’ll be 9.6 billion people on the planet and

70% of them in urban areas. That’s driving a lot of investment and interest in urban farming. Our thinking was if we start in New York and we can figure out solutions ... then we’ll be able to roll out those solutions to the world,” he said.

To initially get set up in Brooklyn back in

2016, Square Roots raised $5 million in — no pun intended — seed money, Peggs explained. For each of the 10 new locations around the country, slightly more than $1 million is needed.

Peggs said the farmers find buyers for their produce, like stores, restaurant­s and individual­s, though they also inherit the clients list from previous Square Roots participan­ts. Some of Square Roots’ staff of 14 help generate leads, too. Thirty percent of what they earn goes to Square Roots, and expenses are another

$30,000. That leaves them with an annual profit of $30,000 to $40,000.

A single 40-foot container provides

320 square feet of growing space. It is outfitted with long, narrow towers studded with crops that are hung on tracks from the ceiling in rows, like vertical blinds. The plants get their water and nutrients from irrigation pipes running along the tops of the towers and their sunlight from dangling narrow strips of LED lights. Besides arugula, crops include kale, radicchio and pak choi.

“What we’ve proven in the first phase is we can take young people with no experience in farming and get them very, very quickly to grow really high-quality food that people want to buy,” he said.

Over the year-long program, the young, mostly twentysome­thing farmers learn about not only agricultur­al science and farm management but also marketing, community outreach, leadership and business, according to Peggs. During a typical week, they spend about

15 to 20 hours doing farm work, 10 hours handling the business side and 10 hours getting coached by Square Roots’ inhouse agricultur­e expert and the team of mentors the company has assembled.

Last year’s group was comprised of 10 people, and this year’s has six. More than 1,500 individual­s have applied to Square Roots, the company said.

The program has attracted participan­ts like Hannah Sharaf, who sells her weekly yield of 25 to 30 pounds of microgreen­s to office workers for $7 per 2.25-ounce bag. Sharaf, 27, said she is fascinated by “how food affects the body,” prompting her to give up a career in internatio­nal marketing. “I really want to be a farmer. I’m exploring both urban and soil.”

Part of the draw is the bold-faced name attached to it: Musk. That could make urban farming a bigger topic in the national conversati­on about local and fresh food.

“I don’t enjoy the industrial food system. It’s definitely not good for America or the world,” Musk said, citing high obesity rates, the thousands of miles food has to be shipped and the lackluster taste. “We’re very excited to teach America about real food.”

 ??  ?? Sharaf grows about 30 pounds of microgreen­s a week and sells them for $7 per 2.25-ounce bag.
Sharaf grows about 30 pounds of microgreen­s a week and sells them for $7 per 2.25-ounce bag.
 ??  ?? Urban farmer Hannah Sharaf, 27, works on her crops this month in Brooklyn, N.Y. Farmers work year-round inside metal shipping containers and grow crops like microgreen­s, herbs and strawberri­es. PHOTOS BY JENNIFER S. ALTMAN, SPECIAL TO USA TODAY
Urban farmer Hannah Sharaf, 27, works on her crops this month in Brooklyn, N.Y. Farmers work year-round inside metal shipping containers and grow crops like microgreen­s, herbs and strawberri­es. PHOTOS BY JENNIFER S. ALTMAN, SPECIAL TO USA TODAY
 ??  ?? Urban farmers Brian Morgan, 28, and Hannah Sharaf inspect their crops inside the shipping containers in Brooklyn, N.Y. JENNIFER S. ALTMAN, SPECIAL TO USA TODAY
Urban farmers Brian Morgan, 28, and Hannah Sharaf inspect their crops inside the shipping containers in Brooklyn, N.Y. JENNIFER S. ALTMAN, SPECIAL TO USA TODAY

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