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Urban Agriculture The future of food. Rapid Population Growth and Food Insecurity  Food insecurity. If supply does not meet demand  The greatest demand.

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Presentation on theme: "Urban Agriculture The future of food. Rapid Population Growth and Food Insecurity  Food insecurity. If supply does not meet demand  The greatest demand."— Presentation transcript:

1 Urban Agriculture The future of food

2 Rapid Population Growth and Food Insecurity  Food insecurity. If supply does not meet demand  The greatest demand will come from the cities by 2050 almost 3/4 of population will be urban CIA: “the number of malnourished people will increase by more than 20 percent...” U.N. -agricultural production will have to grow by 70% to meet urban demand.

3  Population pressures have already resulted in overuse of land in some places Soil erosion > new soil formation every year, wind and rain carry away 25 billion metric tons of rich topsoil. Cities and suburbs are expanding onto land once used to grow food.

4 Unconventional Solutions  Vertical (Skyscraper) Farming -build a glass skyscraper made up of many floors of fields and orchards, could feed 50,000 people. temperature, humidity, airflow, lighting, and nutrients controlled to create the optimum conditions for growth. A conveyer belt would rotate crops on stacked trays around the windows to ensure an even amount of natural light.

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7 However…. additional light would need to be provided artificially to prevent uneven crop growth energy required for this lighting would significantly increase food production costs.

8 The Vertically-Integrated Greenhouse  should require less artificial lighting  Plants would rotate on a conveyor system in a narrow space between two layers of glass built around a building’s perimeter.  This “double-skin façade” greenhouse can be new or a retrofit for existing office buildings.  The greenhouse could reduce the entire building’s energy use up to 30%.

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10 Rooftop Gardens BrightFarms (Gotham Greens) ○ A 15,000 sq. ft. commercial rooftop greenhouse in Brooklyn, New York, sells 500 pounds of produce every day. ○ automated sensors to activate lights, fans, shade curtains, heat blankets, and irrigation pumps that use captured rainwater.

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12  To minimize transportation and storage, the greenhouse was located near the supermarkets and restaurants who will receive the produce the very day it is picked.

13 The VertiCrop System  grows lettuce crops for animals at Paignton Zoo in Devon, England.  Its single-story greenhouse requires less supplemental energy because plants are surrounded by sunlight from the sides and above.

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15  A VertiCrop system with four-meter towers was built on the roof of a garage in Vancouver, Canada. produces 3500 lbs of greens/week = a 5 acre farm with 92% less water and no pesticides.

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17 The Science Barge  Energy from sunlight, solar panels, wind turbines, and bio-fuels  Uses insects rather than chemical pesticides  gets water by harvesting rainwater and desalinating harbor water.

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19 All use Hydroponics  does not require arable land.  plant’s roots are continuously bathed in a solution of water mixed with essential nutrients.  produce healthier plants in half the time.

20  Reduced operating costs + greater yield = bigger profits  help these greenhouses recoup the initial expense for automated and renewable energy technologies.

21  hydroponics and controlled interior climate nearly any kind of crop can be grown anywhere, year round  Yields up to 15-20 times greater than conventional farming. Innovation brings the farm to the city, and if implemented on a large scale, could improve food security.


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