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Emirates Is Building A Giant Vertical Farm To Feed Airline Passengers

Growing conditions are controlled digitally.Image: REUTERS/Rafael Marchante

16 August 2018

Alex Gray Formative Content

The world’s largest vertical farm is coming to Dubai.

The indoor farm is a $40 million joint venture between Crop One Holdings and Emirates Flight Catering, who say it’s a way of producing pesticide-free crops while using a fraction of the water that traditional farming does.

The produce will feed passengers of Emirates and other airlines at Dubai’s Al Maktoum International Airport. The farm will be built near the airport, eliminating trucking costs and emissions.

But is vertical farming really as green as it seems?

Image: Crop One Holdings

How does it work?

To feed a growing global population – which could reach 9.1 billion by 2050 – world food production will need to rise by 70%.

In addition, most of us will be living in cities, and will likely want to source our food locally.

Many think that vertical farms offer a viable solution. 

For one thing, this type of farming doesn’t need soil. The plants are stacked on top of each other in rows, their roots immersed in nutrient-rich water. This system – called hydroponics – uses 99% less water than field farming. The plants sit under LED lights which drive their photosynthesis.

The growing conditions are controlled digitally. The temperature, humidity, light, water and plant nutrients are all monitored by a computer, which constantly adjusts the levels according to what the plants need.

This also means that the farms can be set up anywhere, as long as there’s a source of electricity and access to distilled water. In the future we may see these farms on offshore oil and gas exploration facilities and in extreme climates.

In the new Dubai facility, the plants are stacked together four or five storeys high over 130,000 square feet (12,077 square metres). That’s enough space to grow greens for the 225,000 meals that Emirates Flight Catering produce daily.

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