U.S. vertical farms are racing against
the sun
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[July 08, 2019]
By Jane Lanhee Lee
(Reuters) - Leafy salad greens grown under
banks of LED lights, with mist or drips of water are having their day in
the sun. Several top U.S. indoor farms, stacked with plants from floor
to ceiling, tell Reuters they are boosting production to a level where
they can now supply hundreds of grocery stores.
Plenty, Bowery, Aerofarms and 80 Acres Farms are among young companies
that see a future in salad greens and other produce grown in what are
called vertical farms that rely on robotics and artificial intelligence,
along with LED lights. While the first versions of modern vertical farms
sprouted about a decade ago, in recent years the introduction of
automation and the tracking of data to regulate light and water has
allowed them to get out of lab mode and into stores. Now they are trying
to scale up.
Plenty and others say their customized, controlled lighting - some more
blue light here, some more red light there - makes for tastier plants
compared to sun-grown leaves and that they use 95% less water than
conventional farms, require very little land, and use no pesticides,
making them competitive with organic farms. And because vertical farms
exist in windowless buildings that can be located in the heart of urban
areas, produce does not have to travel far by fossil-fuel-guzzling
trucks to reach stores.
The companies' expansion comes as plant-based burger makers Beyond Meat
Inc and Impossible Foods captivate investors and make inroads in
high-end restaurants and fast-food chains.
But whether the sunless farms can compete financially with their
field-grown brethren, given big upfront investments and electric bills,
remains a question.
"We're competitive with organic today and we're working very hard to
continue to make more and more crops grocery store competitive," said
Matt Barnard, chief executive and co-founder of Plenty, which is based
in Silicon Valley.
Plenty's salads sell on organic grocery delivery site Good Eggs for 99
cents an ounce, while a leading brand, Organic Girl, on grocery chain
Safeway's online site was priced at 80 cents an ounce.
Plenty said its new farm, dubbed "Tigris," can produce enough leafy
greens to supply over 100 stores, compared with its previous farm that
could only supply three stores and some restaurants.
The technology world is paying attention. In its last round in 2017
Plenty raised about $200 million from investors including Japan's
Softbank, Amazon founder and CEO Jeff Bezos and former Alphabet Chairman
Eric Schmidt. New York City-based Bowery raised $95 million in a
fund-raising round led by Google Ventures and Temasek last year.
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Chef and Plenty advisory board member Nancy Silverton prepares a
salad during a demonstration in San Francisco, California, U.S.,
June 11, 2019. Picture taken June 11, 2019. REUTERS/Jane Lanhee Lee
Bowery said its third farm coming online soon will help it supply
hundreds of stores from dozens today, and Aerofarms, in New Jersey,
said it is doubling its space to meet demand.
None of the three companies would give details about costs.
Former Vertical Farm CEO Matt Matros is skeptical that sunless farms
can make economic sense. He invested in and ran Chicago-based
FarmedHere in 2015, but changed its business into food processing.
"The issue with indoor farming was that you could really only grow a
couple things efficiently -- namely basil and micro greens. But the
problem is the world just doesn't need that much basil and micro
greens," Matros said.
80 Acres Farms in Cincinnati says it already grows and sells
tomatoes and cucumbers, and Plenty is testing cherry tomatoes and
strawberries in the lab.
Agriculture technology investor Michael Rose says vertical sunless
farms are more expensive to run than modern greenhouses that rely on
sunlight, supplemented by LED lights. He sees limited areas where it
makes sense, such as the Middle East, where much of the food is
imported, or China's mega-cities where pollution and urban sprawl
limit the availability of premium fresh food.
At Plenty's new farm, robots put seedlings in tall, vertically hung
planters. The planters move along a wall of LED lights for 10 days,
and are then put through a harvesting machine that shaves off the
leafy greens.
The machines minimize labor needs, and Plenty says the speed of
production also helps control pests.
"We use no pesticides," said Nate Storey, co-founder and chief
scientist at Plenty. "We don't even have to use things like
ladybugs, because we go so fast in our production that we out-race
the pests themselves."
(Reporting by Jane Lanhee Lee; editing by Peter Henderson and Leslie
Adler)
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