Vertical farming, the best solution to support an ever growing population or just a scam?

IMHO it has a lot of potential but not being able to grow grains really is something that should be tackled sooner rather than later. But I could see this being used by self sustaining communities to provide lots of food while using very little space. And it’s technically more environmentally friendly than just using vast stretches of land to produce the same amount of food.

  • keepthepace
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    1 year ago

    I have gone back and forth on vertical farming. There are scams in the field, but there are also some merits (most of them apply to urban farming in general).

    The main issue you have with vertical farming is that there is only so much stacking you can do before you get out of light. A pillar like in the illustration projects a shadow, in which you can’t really put plants.

    However right now sunlight is not the limiting factor for plants growth. IIRC depending on the plant it is either water or CO2 so you can do some amount of vertical farming. To me, the interest is not to come as a replacement for regular farming (so growing grains is not the issue, you will have a hard time beating the efficiency of a flat field + tractor), the interests are:

    • freshness. Having herbs that you can cut as you need them is really a taste changer.
    • air cleaning. Some plants do have the ability to fixate some VOCs.
    • less transportation. Having the plants grown in the same building block means that the CO2 footprint will be much lower
    • more efficient water usage. Careful with this one, in some places water will be more scarce in city than countryside, but water consumption of such systems is generally lower.
    • less refrigeration. If the food has less transportation it also requires less refrigeration
    • local fruits all year long. Assuming they are put in a controlled environment like a greenhouse, getting food that normally requires a lot of transportation locally becomes possible.

    So to sum up, it is less of a solution to make regular agriculture sustainable and more to make sustainable agriculture more enjoyable. Actually one does not need tasty herbs and exotic fruits, but the ability t have them without poisoning the planet is nice and, well, solarpunk.

    • Doctor_oloOP
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      1 year ago

      That is a very interesting perspective, thank you for making me think of things in a slightly different light. But yes I agree any type of advancement in farming from this point in human history and onwards should be attempting to achieve 2 things:

      • Dont poison the planet (we kind of need it)

      • Make food preferably with some variety

    • HelixDab@kbin.social
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      1 year ago

      Depending on how you generate power, you could use LED grow lights in vertical farms. You also have the luxury of working in an environment that you can tightly control; that means you may not need to use pesticides or herbicide at all. If you aren’t working in large fields, you can get away from using heavy diesel farm equipment.

      Fundamentally, we need to use less land for farming, we need to use far fewer pesticides and herbicides, and need to reduce the emissions associated with farming. Vertical farming has the potential to help with all of those.

      • Moira_Mayhem@kbin.social
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        1 year ago

        The pest control is true for the short term, though I find that over time even well kept facilities develop some kind of pest problem.

        maybe if they kept chickens in the lobby…

        • HelixDab@kbin.social
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          1 year ago

          You could, for instance, shut down at the end of a cycle and do a thorough cleaning without using pesticides. Using steam, heat, and high-powered ultraviolet light, you should be able to effectively kill any pests or eggs that pests are leaving. Yes, pesticides are certainly less expensive in the short run, but in terms of long-term health for the entire planet, they’re super-bad.

    • RoboGroMo
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      1 year ago

      Freshness is such a key thing, the difference is taste is so significant especially with herbs and greens so enabling people to have an easy to manage and small footprint little tower of good food in their garden, balcony, or similar would be really good especially for renters if it could be packed up for transport then resembled in the new location.

      • keepthepace
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        1 year ago

        An overlooked factor that I have no idea how to quantify is that access to tasty greens may reduce meat consumption.

    • Moira_Mayhem@kbin.social
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      1 year ago

      There’s an organic produce company in Manhattan that uses vertical grow chambers and they get around the lighting problem by illuminating from the center of the cluster and rotating the plant pods occasionally.

      They get around energy usage by charging a premium and taking advantage of state agricultural grants.

      It’s expensive but you can get city grown butter lettuce year round.

      • keepthepace
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        1 year ago

        Normally that would be a bit of an heresy, but fun thing: with the good LEDs at the good frequency, you can make a solar panel + LED setup that is actually efficient enough to provide more light to the plant than it would normally receive.

        • Moira_Mayhem@kbin.social
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          1 year ago

          The notable thing about highrises is a small solar footprint, and you need to have ownership/rights to install on the roof.

          If you have that much space for solar panels, then maybe a traditional grow would be better than urban vert farming

          • keepthepace
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            1 year ago

            I am not saying that this is necessarily a good idea, but it is technically possible to grow more plants with solar panel + LEDs in the same area than through direct sunlight illumination. (IIRC by almost 200%).

            The added complexity and manufacturing may not be worth it, but the calculation can be different where your energy is cheap and abundant through other renewable means that have lower footprint (like hydro or wind).

          • RoboGroMo
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            1 year ago

            It can also be really good in areas where the climate isn’t great for year round growing, with enough PV you’ll still get enough to power the LEDs which you can put close above the plants and have on for 17 hours where as the natural sun might not be as bright or steady, also if you have like a wall unit inside then you don’t need to worry about frost, slow growth due to cold or hot weather scorching. Having herbs growing inside really improves the quality of a room too, that fresh smell is nice.

          • keepthepace
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            1 year ago

            Ah not really, just did the math a while ago with someone. I was arguing that it was inefficient and stupid to put a solar panel somewhere to generate electricity to grow plants with LEDs vs just putting the plants under the sun. We saw that not only was it actually possible energy-wise but if you take the limits of the efficiencies in terms of LEDs and solar panel you could barely stack two levels of plants. It was something like 5 years ago so I guess efficiency has raised since then.

            • poVoqMA
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              1 year ago

              One for one the efficiency improvement is not so great, but it allows extending the time of light availability, which can make a real difference in northern latitudes during winter time.

        • greengnu
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          1 year ago

          depends extremely heavily on the efficiency of the panels.

          You would need to exceed 84% solar to electricity conversion efficiency to make that conversion pay off.

          As chlorophyll has an approximate 90% maximum interception of 400nm to 740nm light and your panels would be getting the extra energy from frequencies outside of that range. The energy of a photon is determined by hc/λ, with the result that the energy of a blue photon (400 nm) is 75% greater than that of a red photon (700 nm).

          Anything less than that would be a net loss unless there is a significant increase of ultraviolet light in the near future.

          • keepthepace
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            1 year ago

            Within the 400 to 740nm range chlorophyll has a huge gap: https://cdn.kastatic.org/ka-perseus-images/27c5e928745dbde12550494315ec70253091eee5.png whereas sunlight is strong across all of it. Grow lights usually only provide blue and red wavelengths that are better absorbed. Also, most plants’ growth are not limited by sunlight but usually either by water/nutrients or CO2, so most of them can receive a bit less light than the sun typically provides.

            The calculation we had done a few years ago, that gave us the result that a square meter of PV could light up almost 2 square meter of crops, only took these spectra into account.

            Since then, I have read really counter intuitive things that may even raise the efficiency higher (and the weirdness of grow boxes even more). People started using LASER LEDs to grow plants. Low power of course, but it turns out that concentrating the light on where the plants and leaves actually are does indeed maximize the number of photons that get absorbed.

            Here again, I am not sure this is something desirable or the future that I want, but this is a possibility that is out there.

            • greengnu
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              1 year ago

              and how did the experimental test of the calculated results turn out?

              I would be quite interested to learn more.

              • keepthepace
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                1 year ago

                This was just a theoretical discussion, like I said, I am not sure this would be a good idea per se even if possible.

    • Kent Borg@social.tchncs.de
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      1 year ago

      @keepthepace @Doctor_olo Do remember that in a city shadows (shade) can be valuable.

      Even away from cities, there are conventionally farmed crops that would appreciate the shade that a bunch of photovoltaic panels could offer: Put them higher up and provide sufficient access below.