How Abu Dhabi Found a Way to Grow Vegetables in 40-degree Heat
Published on by Water Network Research, Official research team of The Water Network in Technology
Could you grow your lunch in an old shipping container? One that's situated in 40-degree desert heat?
A project underway in Abu Dhabi aims to encourage people to do just that - pairing old shipping containers and high-tech hydroponics to overcome the region’s hostile climate and increase local food production.
Representative Image Source: Pixabay, labeled for reuse
While food security issues are climbing up the agenda globally, they are felt particularly acutely in the United Arab Emirates, where temperatures are high and rain levels low. Creating vertical farms inside shipping containers could help communities grow more of their own produce and cut down on the cost of transporting food to the region.
In Masdar City - an urban development project in Abu Dhabi - Madar Farms are using hydroponic systems that require much less water than traditional farms, to grow lettuce, herbs, and brassicas. The project is being showcased at Abu Dhabi Sustainability Week.
Because the plants are growing in a controlled environment inside the container, with nutrients coming from enriched water, pesticides and insecticides are not required. LED lighting with deep red and blue hues mimics sunlight and cycles on and off to simulate periods of day and night for the plants.
According to proponents of the idea, shipping-container-based farming uses 95% less water than traditional farming. The containers, which are 12.2 meters long and 2.4 wide, are stackable, durable and easy to modify. It’s an idea that’s taking hold elsewhere as well, with CropBox offering a similar idea in the United States.
Some people argue that becoming dependent on such methods creates a reliance on secure energy supply to power the boxes, while others point out it could disrupt ecosystems and harm pollinators.
Despite these reservations, vertical farming systems like this one, where grow towers hang vertically, and others, where crops are stacked, are seen as essential for the future of sustainable farming.
Shaping the Future of Food
Shaping the Future of Food is one of the World Economic Forum’s key initiatives since it anticipates the global population will have swelled to 9.8 billion by 2050, resulting in a need for 70% more food than is consumed today. Leadership, innovation, and collaborative action are needed to meet the challenge, it says.
“Food systems do not currently provide nutritious food in an environmentally sustainable way,” the initiative says. “At the same time, food production, transportation, processing, and waste are putting an unsustainable strain on environmental resources.”
Read more about shipping-container-based farming on World Economic Forum
Media
Taxonomy
- Hydroponics
- Sustainable Agriculture
- Centralized Irrigation Control
- Urban Agriculture
- Water Harvesting
- Vertical Farming
- Food Security
- Water Efficiency
- Best Management Practices
- Future Irrigation Systems
- Aquaculture Systems
- Agricultural Engineering
- Sustainability
- Sustainable Agriculture
- Agricultural Technology
- Sustainibility
- Climate Change & Sustainibility
- Research