MIT CityFARM Growing More Food with Less Water
Published on by Water Network Research, Official research team of The Water Network in Academic
CityFARM Growing Food 3 Faster, with 90% Less Water Using Hydroponic, Aquaponic and Aeroponic Production Systems
A team consisting of engineers, architects, urban planners, economists and plant scientists at MIT has set out to shift traditional farming from the distributed, water- and energy-intense practices of the present to a high-performing, affordable, urban agricultural system with the potential to feed many people.
TheMIT CityFARMteam has already grown produce such as lettuce and tomatoes, using hydroponic, aquaponic and aeroponic production systems. Coupled with new diagnostic, sensing, automated and autonomous delivery and harvest systems, the team says their process has the potential to cut water use for agriculture by 98 percent, "eliminate chemical fertilizers and pesticides, double nutrient densities and reduce embodied energy in produce by a factor of 10."
Another benefit of the CityFARM system is a faster crop growing time —roughly 3-4 times faster: A head of lettuce that may mature in 100 days takes 15-20 days to grow in the lab.
The push for locally grown food is not new. But the team at MIT is thinking ahead to the dramatic shift that could occur if urban farms could scale using their research. Growing and consuming local food on a large scale could dramatically cut air pollution from transportation, fertilizer runoff, and nutrient depletion from the soil in remote farms, while creating jobs for a growing urban workforce. The team is combining their findings with architectural,lightand space research to see how these urban farming systems can integrate into existing cityscapes through what the team calls the Urban Agriculture Facade . With the high costs associated with urban real estate, they are curious to see if existing and underutilized buildings can become the hubs of a new urban farming movement that provides food access to future cities.
Because getting access to agricultural information is difficult, the team plans to create an open platform that allows researchers from around the world to collaborate, share data, insights and work together to improve crop yields. The Open Agriculture project just launched and is looking for strategic partners for the first open-source agricultural technology research collective.
Source: Sustainable Brands
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