No soil? No problem: Hydroponic farming could help combat climate change and food insecurity - Climate360 News (2024)

No soil? No problem: Hydroponic farming could help combat climate change and food insecurity - Climate360 News (1)

By Domenic Purdy

As the world population nears 10 billionby2050, overall food demand is expected to increase by over 50%,accordingto the World Resources Institute.Climate change will make feedingthat population more difficultin some regions.

Increased heat stress, rainfall intensity, flooding and drought could reduce crop yields and leave once arable land unusable, leading to food insecurity,accordingto the Environmental Protection Agency.

To grow more food with less land,some farmers and scientists havepointedto the potential ofhydroponics, a method of vertical farming.

Hydroponic farminginvolves suspending plants in a water solution witheach essential nutrient necessary for a plantto grow, removing the need for soil.This way, plants can be stacked on top of one anotherin a climate-controlled greenhousealmost anywhere,instead of taking up acres of fertile land.

“As kids we are taught soil has all these purposes. It stabilizes the plant, it provides nutrients to the plant, it provides water to the plant,” said Lee Rouse, a former Louisiana State UniversityAgricultural Centerhorticulture extension agent. “But what’s interesting is that none of that’s actually true. You don’t need to have soil to do any of that.”

Hydroponics vs. Traditional Farming

Rouse, a Baton Rouge native, studied hydroponic systems as an LSU graduate student.

As a horticulture extension agent for East Baton Rouge Parish, Rouse was tasked with translating academic research to the publicand commercial farming industry.

No soil? No problem: Hydroponic farming could help combat climate change and food insecurity - Climate360 News (2)

“Originally what [hydroponics] was used for was by scientists trying to determine what elements were essential for plants. We now know there’s 16 essential nutrients that every plant on earth needs to go from seed to seed, from generation to generation,” Rouse said.

At his hydroponic field days, Rouse would explain the nuances of thevertical farmingsystems he has used to grow foods ranging from leafy greens like lettuce and basil to fruits like strawberries.

He said he envisions a future in which hydroponics can be used to give abandoned buildings a new, more efficient purpose.

“One way it could have some reversable effects on global warming is, if you take that building and instead of turning it into a hotel, you take one acre of land, 20 stories tall, and now you can grow 20 acres of food on that without actually deforesting 20 acres,” he said. “It would take 20 acres of flat earth to make the same food crop, so why don’t we just reforest that? Over time this could have a long-term effect on carbon emissions.”

Another advantage of hydroponics is the ability to grow more food in a localized area without the need to transportas manymaterials. Transportation of food materials results in carbon emissions from trucks burning fossil fuels.

“The big mitigation potential that a lot of people are focusing on is this idea of localization of food product,”said Robert Newell,associatedirector of the Food and Agriculture Institute at the University of the Fraser Valley in British Columbia, Canada. “When you reduce transportation distances, you’re really reducing the need for greenhouse gas emissions.”

Newellresearches the potential toproduceanimal feedby growing plants atop a mesh platform and using a sprinkling system to deliver nutrients.

He said localization of food production using hydroponics could also offset transportation costs because, “you’re creating more biomass and with a minimal land footprint.”

“You’re getting more bang for your buck,” he said. “What it translates to is, rather than having to transport two trucks of material, you transport fewer.”

Rouse said previous attempts at hydroponics were centered around this idea of localization, specifically its use during World WarII. American soldiers stationed in the Pacific used hydroponics to grow food in areas where supplies were limited.

“Some of the very rocky parts where they’d land in ships didn’t have soil, and it was very difficult to get food. It definitely kept food in production where they didn’t have to be shipped in on a regular basis,” he said. “You can grow it locally and in very poor climates, like in Las Vegas or Pacific islands. and have the same product. Why waste fossil fuels on shipping the product?”

Limitations

Rousesaidthere are majorlimitations that have held hydroponics and other methods of vertical farming back from being widely adopted.

“The upfront cost is huge,” Rouse said.

Small hydroponic farms spend on average 6% of total spending on nutrients, seeds and growing mediums. The rest of the cost goes to maintaining a sensitive growing environment within a polycarbonate or glass greenhouse, according toPure Green, a hydroponic supply manufacturer in Arizona.

These greenhouses are energy intensive. Large hydroponic farms with more than 10,000 square feet of crops spend an estimated 25% of total spending on energy to simply power climate control systems.

If the energy demand to supply vertical farmsis greater than the reductionsin greenhouse gas emissions they bring, large-scale adoption of the technology would do more harm than good, Newell said.

“In a place like Alberta, [Canada], what you’re doing is you’re actually using more of a fossil fuel-based energy system, and it turned out that growing with green versions of conventional methods was more climate change advantageous [than hydroponic systems],” he said.

Experts are quick to note thatthere is no silver bullet to food insecurity and the many ramifications of climate change on agriculture. Rouse and Newell are more comfortable callinghydroponicsapotentialadaptation.

“Unfortunately, I don’t think hydroponics are going to reverse climate change. But if we stay on the projected course and nothing changes and we are degrading land and it’s becoming unfarmable, then hydroponics is a good back up plan for that,” Rouse said.

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No soil? No problem: Hydroponic farming could help combat climate change and food insecurity - Climate360 News (2024)
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