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OKIsItJustMe

(19,968 posts)
Tue Sep 19, 2023, 01:19 PM Sep 2023

AP: Lots of indoor farms are shutting down as their businesses struggle. So why are more being built

Lots of indoor farms are shutting down as their businesses struggle. So why are more being built?
BY MELINA WALLING AND KENDRIA LAFLEUR
Updated 8:44 PM EDT, September 17, 2023

CLEBURNE, Texas (AP) — Inside a bright greenhouse about an hour outside Dallas, workers in hairnets and gloves place plugs of lettuce and other greens into small plastic containers — hundreds of thousands of them — that stack up to the ceiling. A few weeks later, once the vegetables grow to full size, they’ll be picked, packaged and shipped out to local shelves within 48 hours.

This is Eden Green Technology, one of the latest crop of indoor farming companies seeking their fortunes with green factories meant to pump out harvests of fresh produce all year long. The company operates two greenhouses and has broken ground on two more at its Cleburne campus, where the indoor facilities are meant to shelter their portion of the food supply from climate change while using less water and land.

But that’s if the concept works. And players in the industry are betting big even as rivals wobble and fail. California-based Plenty Unlimited this summer broke ground on a $300 million facility, while Kroger announced that it will be expanding its availability of vertically farmed produce. Meanwhile, two indoor farming companies that attracted strong startup money — New Jersey’s AeroFarms and Kentucky’s AppHarvest — filed for bankruptcy reorganization. And a five-year-old company in Detroit, Planted Detroit, shut its doors this summer, with the CEO citing financial problems just months after touting plans to open a second farm.

The industry churn doesn’t bother Jacob Portillo, a grower with Eden Green who directs a plant health team and monitors irrigation, nutrients and other factors related to crop needs.

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AP: Lots of indoor farms are shutting down as their businesses struggle. So why are more being built (Original Post) OKIsItJustMe Sep 2023 OP
Indoor farms are the new strip malls? bucolic_frolic Sep 2023 #1
If we are to eat under new climate conditions, they will become a necessity OKIsItJustMe Sep 2023 #3
How so? As of now, indoor farming doesn't actually grow any staple crops NickB79 Sep 2023 #6
As with any young industry or technology... Think. Again. Sep 2023 #2
Really hope these businesses survive. zuul Sep 2023 #4
EPA: Climate Change Impacts on Agriculture and Food Supply OKIsItJustMe Sep 2023 #5

OKIsItJustMe

(19,968 posts)
3. If we are to eat under new climate conditions, they will become a necessity
Tue Sep 19, 2023, 01:37 PM
Sep 2023

Our food crops grow best in certain “microclimates” which (on the best days) are shifting. Increasing droughts, heavy rainfall, winds, hail… all make conventional farming “problematic.”

(In theory) current fields could be reforested. (Yeah, right…)

NickB79

(19,326 posts)
6. How so? As of now, indoor farming doesn't actually grow any staple crops
Wed Sep 20, 2023, 08:38 PM
Sep 2023

Every setup I've ever read of or seen only grows boutique products: lettuce, kale, microgreens, etc. Tasty side dishes, but in no way calorie-dense enough to support much of a population.

The best one I've personally seen, from a calories out standpoint, is the Bushel Boy operation up here in Minnesota. And even then, no one is basing a sizeable portion of their daily caloric intake on tomatoes.

Someone get back to me when a vertical and/or indoor farm starts growing corn, beans, potatoes, rice, plantains, or wheat at scale and at a profit. Because that's what we'll need, not lettuce.

zuul

(14,631 posts)
4. Really hope these businesses survive.
Tue Sep 19, 2023, 01:38 PM
Sep 2023

This may be the key to food production in the future as the planet continues to boil and crops can’t survive the drought and heat.

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