COMMENTS: 35
Will Cities Soon Be Able to Feed Themselves?
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During World Wars I and II, victory gardens were considered a patriotic effort to take the pressure off the food supply and to boost morale by having people see their labor translated into produce.
An urban farmer in Oakland, Esperanza Pallana, doesn't necessarily garden as a patriotic effort, but she does enjoy what her work in the garden gives her.
"There are so many things I like about it, besides just having a food supply, though it is like magic to go out in backyard and get eggs that are fresh and delicious and to have a source of honey," she says. "It's so satisfying when I sit down to a meal and 75 percent is straight out of the backyard."
Pallana didn't start her garden with the thought of growing anything edible -- she merely wanted to fix up her front yard, which was so messy that people routinely threw trash in it. A peach tree in the yard inspired her to plant more food, but she says she just bought things at the nursery and put them in the ground; she had no idea about harvesting the food. After birds ate the broccoli she had planted, she determined to learn what she was doing and started again. Now her garden, along with produce, includes bees, turkeys and chickens.
Pallana's interest in soil and food systems has taken over her life. She now works at Urban Sprouts, a nonprofit school gardens organization, and she says she has seen the interest in urban farming grow in the four years she has been doing it.
"When we built our chicken coop, we had to design it ourselves -- I couldn't find anything about how to do it," she says. "Now there are all these books and designs online. I just see a lot of excitement and enthusiasm about this."
Barbara Finnin, the executive director of Oakland's City Slicker Farm, also sees that excitement with the people she works with in the organization's Backyard Garden Program, which helps low-income people start their own gardens.
"They tell us they didn't think it was possible to get this from a dirt patch full of weeds," Finnin says. "People feel like they have access in their backyard and they can go to pick some lettuce and collards and cook. They are really engaged with, literally, the fruits of their labor."
Having accessible healthy food is particularly important in West Oakland, where City Slicker Farm is located, Finnin says. The 21,000 residents have to leave their neighborhood to get to a grocery store, and many of them, she adds, don't have a car. To meet that immediate need for fresh food, City Slicker started in 2001 by setting up a stand and giving away food; now the organization has six lots that produce about 10,000 pounds of produce, which is sold on a sliding scale.
More and more urban agriculture projects are springing up throughout the country. When Taja Sevelle moved to Detroit in 2005 and saw the hunger, vacant lots and health problems associated with lack of fresh food, she decided that growing food on unused land was the answer. Her organization, Urban Farming, now has about 600 community gardens, many of them in Detroit, but throughout the United States and the world as well. Its lofty mission is to "eradicate hunger."
This may seem daunting, but Executive Director Sevelle, who studied to be a botanist before signing a record contract with Prince, thinks this is a reachable goal. She points to the success of the victory gardens and says her organization fed about a quarter of a million people in Detroit last year.
"This is absolutely doable. It needs to be solved and can be solved," she says. "More and more I'm seeing and hearing people making bold statements. Look at the amazing things we've done as humans. If we're able to go to the moon, certainly we can solve the problem of hunger."
Sevelle says a standard size garden of 20 feet by 20 feet will produce a quarter to a third of a ton of food and that food banks define a meal as one pound of food. Savelle sees opportunity to grow that food everywhere: Her organization plants school and rooftop gardens, and works with corporations to do edible landscaping.
But we don't live by produce alone. Kristin Reynolds, from the Small Farm Program at the University of California, applauds people's efforts to grow food for themselves, but she thinks people wouldn't be able to really feed themselves without growing grains.
"I think it would be very difficult to be self-sufficient," she says. "And I question whether that is the best use of space."
Urban farming the way Columbia University professor Dickson Despommier envisions it includes grains. Despommier and his graduate students in a medical ecology class came up with a plan they call vertical farming, which would allow farming in high-rises. It's estimated that by 2050, the population will grow by at least 3 billion and about 80 percent of the world will live in urban centers. That means we need to find a new way to produce more food, Despommier says. And corn, wheat and rice are easy to grow indoors, says the professor of environmental health sciences and microbiology.
There would be no soil in a vertical farm -- things would be grown using in the air with a method called aeroponics; or hydroponically, where plants are grown in a mineral nutrient. The energy would come from a variety of sources, including geothermal, wind, solar and incinerated sewage, and the water would be recycled.
Despommier says there are all sorts of reasons why his plan is the way to go. He cites the advantages of growing food indoors: no weather-related disasters, no plant diseases, no chemical sprays, lower water usage and lower food miles. All that is needed to make it happen is money and political will, he says. And Despommier is confident that we'll see vertical farming within the next decade, as governments get more concerned about food.
"I can guarantee you there are city councils meeting right now about this," Dickson says. "Dubai is very interested, and Shanghai and Las Vegas. Manhattan Borough President Scott Stringer is pursuing this idea, and the Department of the Environment in San Francisco is interested."
Kevin Drew, the special projects coordinator at that department, says he and his colleagues are intrigued by the possibilities, particularly Despommier's projection of the land now used for farming going back to nature.
"His notion that you could replace a lot or all farming on the land is one of the most radical," he says. "Then you'd let the earth go back to forests and wetlands, which are some of the most efficient climate drivers in the right direction."
Drew says San Francisco already has community and school gardens that grow food, but vertical farming would increase the amount of food the city could produce. He admits to being slightly skeptical at the thought of a 30-story building supplying enough food for 50,000, as Despommier suggests, but says it's an idea he wants to explore.
"Given state of pot farming in California, there is ample evidence extremely effective farming can be done inside, not growing in soil," he says.
Drew says the agency is looking at trying to retrofit existing buildings or perhaps putting a vertical farming building in some of the more toxic areas of San Francisco.
"You could spend umpty-umph million trying to get the toxicity out of soil, or you could pour six feet of concrete over it and call it done," he says.
Sadhu Johnston, the chief environmental officer for the city of Chicago, says city officials there are committed to urban agricultural and locally produced food. And with the constraints of weather and land in the city, Johnston says he would like to see food grown in high-rises -- he believes doing so could revitalize neighborhoods and employ people. Vertical farming would also cut down on water use by not spraying and save transportation costs of food being shipped in, Johnston says.
Growing food locally would undoubtedly save on transportation, says Bruce Bugbee, a professor of crop physiology at Utah State University. But he scoffs at the rice-in-the-sky idea because he believes the energy costs of growing food indoors are far too great.
"It can't work. That's the quick answer," Bugbee says. "The electric bill will make it far more expensive than what you can buy in the stores, and the produce is of lesser quality. And I'm saying that from 25 years of working with NASA, growing food in controlled environments."
Bugbee argues that we won't, as Despommier suggests, run out of land to grow food on.
"China has five times the population of the U.S., and they feed themselves," he says. "This is a horrible ecological idea because it takes such massive amounts of energy to run it whereas sunlight is free. It looks good to somebody who's never tried it."
But Despommier is undaunted by criticism. He says there are all kinds of alternative sources of energy to be tried, such as sun and wind. Despommier also wants to recycle waste, the way he says cities in Europe do.
"We're not behaving very ecologically," he says. "Today, Germany incinerates everything. Why don't we do that? Because we're living in the 19th century."
Despommier cheerfully admits that at first vertical farming will need to be subsidized -- the way farms are now, he says.
"At first nobody is going to make any money whatsoever doing vertical farming," he says. "But what you will make is food, and tell me you don't need that."
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Posted by: Jim on Oct 2, 2008 4:13 AM
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But artificial light? Maybe using solar power? It will still take about the same number of acres of solar panels or collectors to get enough energy to get enought light to grow the crops -- most likely more land area due to the losses in converting light to electicity and the losses of transmission.
Well, maybe it will work when we get our basement cold fusion generators working!
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» Cold Fusion
Posted by: benzene
» RE: Cold Fusion
Posted by: badkitty
» no weather-related disasters, no plant diseases ... NO FLAVOR
Posted by: Smackback
» RE: How very luddite of you
Posted by: rfrancis@godisdead.com
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Posted by: benzene on Oct 2, 2008 4:47 AM
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The water that the fish are grown in would need to be changed through and filtered to keep it clean enough so they don't die off or anything. Plant roots make pretty good filters. So use the nutrient-rich (fish poop fertilizer!) fish water to grow the plants, and then cycle the water filtered through the plants back to the fish. In this way, theoretically you'd only lose water when it gets shipped out inside the food, thus reducing the inputs.
Net result: urban grown veggies/fruits/grains + urban grown protein.
The details of this weren't mentioned in the article above, but if the Microbiologist's designs for his vertical farm don't let in sunlight readily, then he should be slapped for stupidity a couple of times. Yes, we can efficiently grow stuff with Grow-Lights, but to rely entirely upon them is stupid. What happens to the growing plants if the electrical grid shorts out for a couple of days? Sunlight is indeed free, and by using parabolic mirrors and sealed fiberoptic cables, it could be transported basically anywhere within the building. Either way, the design would score a lot of Common-Sense Points if it were modular and easily mass-producible.
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Posted by: motorchickd on Oct 2, 2008 5:26 AM
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» RE: Welcome to our Third World banana republic
Posted by: Sushi
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Posted by: rfrancis@godisdead.com on Oct 2, 2008 6:06 AM
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It wouldn't take much, a couple of off the shelf Sony robotic arms that can tie down branches, pick fruits and veggies, change light bulbs.
Envision the towers in the matrix that housed people. Each pod would be a grow chamber. A track would exist so the robotic arm assembly can move vertically or horizontally and get to any grow chamber.
From there using preprogrammed routines the robotic arm assembly would perform all the normal maintenance functions needed through the growing process, then move on to the next chamber.
This could all be housed in the central core of a building, areas that don't make for great rooms for people because of the lack of windows. Sort of a building within a building.
The only other answer I can see is to just keep bulldozing land, displacing animals from their natural habitats, driving them to extinction.
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Posted by: Purple Girl on Oct 2, 2008 6:09 AM
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So Who is laso Sucking Off Our National Teat- Big AgriCorps. taking out loans to do What?...Increase the Cost of our food- if cost of living and cost of Products remain even, we'd only be spending about $1.25 per Loaf of Bread today. So Big agri Business has FAILED at it's very core Claim- it has not made Food more economical. It has also Failed to Assure a Higher Standard of Food Safety. Infact they have not only caused more food borne illnes outbreaks and Deaths, they have increased the Size of those who are at risk for the illness. By Transporting food Items across the Country - or World- which could be produced Locally- they have assured far Higher numbers of types of outbreaks and Scope of Outbreaks and Their Impact on the scoiety as a whole. Add to that the Numerous cases of Animal Abuse at the hands of 9-5 'for the Paycheck Only' Employees of these Mass Facilities. They Know their Job - but they Don't know Animal Husbandry, nor are the Corps apparently Training them, or even care to!
Privatization - ei 'Trickle Down' from the Corps droppings Economic Stratedgy has FAILED in All Areas.Reagans Puppet masters Economic Highjacking has Led this Country to the Drain!We ahve been circling for the last 2 decades- We Knew 'Shit Rolls Down Hill' economics was a Scam (TREASON) as soon as He uttered it's Shortend Title! And have screamed evey time it took down one more essential aspect of Our Democratic Free Market!
Frankly I admire the Chinese for One thing... their willingness to hold top officials Legally guilty for their part in Undermining Their Economy...They Lop Off their Heads Within a week!Now Theres a Tradition WE should Embrace!
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Posted by: jejonach on Oct 2, 2008 7:01 AM
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Posted by: Last Chance on Oct 2, 2008 7:24 AM
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Posted by: Jasonix on Oct 2, 2008 8:12 AM
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» Those who say it can't be done...
Posted by: zizizzi
» Are there people who are actually doing it?
Posted by: truthlover
» RE: Are there people who are actually doing it?
Posted by: EJLima
» RE: Are there people who are actually doing it?
Posted by: EJLima
» British Columbia's full of 'em ;)
Posted by: hurricane hugo
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Posted by: Roxsen on Oct 2, 2008 9:06 AM
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» RE: Urban Farming's New SPIN
Posted by: richholland
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Posted by: Gravitas on Oct 2, 2008 9:29 AM
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Yes! Unfortunately, people fail to realize we NEVER had a lack of solutions to any problem we faced. The system is set up for those in power to keep it and continue exploiting the rest of us. That is why things never get done.
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» RE: To be fair, nothing ever gets done also because people with ideas sit on their ass getting high
Posted by: rfrancis@godisdead.com
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Posted by: truthlover on Oct 2, 2008 10:20 AM
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- the gardens around people's houses
- the strips of land between the sidewalk and the road
- undeveloped lots
I'm not convinced about towerblock farming, but here's a type of vertical farming that I've seen done: growing up the outsides of buildings, freestanding walls and tree trunks, using trellises if necessary. I've even seen it done on a platform just wide enough for the gardener to get access. You can grow beans, peas, tomatoes, anything that climbs or can be tied. I've seen beans grown up fruit trees.
I grew potatoes in a pile of hay lying on top of concrete. They grew to a fair size and tasted fine, and they didn't need scrubbing.
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» RE: Lots of urban land is currently unused
Posted by: billwald
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Posted by: truthlover on Oct 2, 2008 10:26 AM
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In the last depression, there were parts of some cities where people even kept cows and goats for milk.
I suppose you could keep a fish tank, too, but don't know how that works out.
However, watch out for the local laws if you are thinking of doing any of this.
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» RE: Livestock
Posted by: TheLimit
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Posted by: PaulK on Oct 2, 2008 11:48 AM
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In the low-frost belt, a greenhouse roof will keep the crops perhaps 10 degrees warmer all winter. In Atlanta this means no frost on the lettuce and broccoli. It doesn't quite mean that the tomatoes will ripen in January, but at least the vines won't freeze and the tomato plants will start producing again in February.
If you could afford just a tiny bit of heat to keep the plants from freezing on the coldest nights, that oil expenditure might be worth it. Shipping tomatoes in from Mexico or from South America costs a lot more diesel fuel, and the tomatoes are cardboard.
For an even better greenhouse roof, the building has some kind of active heat storage in the basement and air ducts running up to the greenhouse. Now the greenhouse can take maybe 20 degrees below freezing and still not freeze the crops, or burn extra heating oil or natural gas.
Bonus Most of that actively stored solar heat won't be needed by the greenhouse in October, November, February and March. You might as well use it to heat the building to 72 degrees on a March night, for free! The active solar system will cut your building's heating oil consumption in any month except January. Also, you won't be losing quite as much heat out the roof of the building due to the extra insulating layer of the greenhouse roof.
Do you like what you've read so far? You can do all the above tomorrow. However, do you want to build a better greenhouse roof?
http://www.klinkmansolar.com
Sorry. I don't have a primo website, just a simple one. That's who I am.
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Posted by: Farmertim on Oct 2, 2008 1:23 PM
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Yet we see manicured lawns and signs that offer opportunities to travel to a third world country to help those in need.
Farmertim
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» RE: Mega-churches
Posted by: richholland
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Posted by: maxpayne on Oct 2, 2008 2:33 PM
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Posted by: hurricane hugo on Oct 2, 2008 3:34 PM
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jdfu!
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Posted by: kreyn on Oct 3, 2008 11:36 AM
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My comments about grains were made in response to critiques on urban agriculture and urban farmers/gardeners that refer to urban ag, and particularly Victory Gardening, as idealistic activities. My response to these critiques was that I haven't heard many practitioners talk about complete urban self-sufficiency, especially because growing a large quantity of grains in small spaces would be difficult. However, produce can be grown close to the home and doing so is a good way to bring the 'local' home.
Please see :
www.sfc.ucdavis.edu
AND
www.attra.ncat.org
for additional articles that I've written on the topic.
thank you.
Kristin Reynolds
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Posted by: Andy at Arcwire on Oct 7, 2008 2:41 PM
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The Vertical Farm is a self-contained, city-sized Battery of Life - that takes wastewater and compost and produces clean energy, clean water, and food!
For a detailed description of the Vertical Farm, read my in-depth article on Arcwire.org. You can also watch a video interview with Doctor Despommier that I did with Scribe Media.
With more and more of humanity living in cities, urban areas will need to feed themselves more cleanly and efficiently, as well as find better ways to recycle their waste.
Vertical Farming has promising answers for these most urgent concerns!
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Posted by: Opinionator on Oct 7, 2008 4:51 PM
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Posted by: hilly7 on Oct 7, 2008 9:05 PM
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1 - The population is already scheduled to decrease. Children today will not live as long as their parents. For that matter, young parents are dieing earlier. Read the obtuaries in your local paper as ages. Spelled out, larger populations is a myth these days.
2 - The worth of a plant is it's minerals. Ever check just how clean the sir is? You can substitue elements, but they all differ, too much or too little areo qualities and the plant either dies or produces nothing.
3- Growing gardens in empty lots, back yards, flower pots, etc, are a great ideal. You will not be able to be 100% self-sufficient, but then again you will not as a farmer either. It will help
4 - Attention: Little House on the Prarie is just a movie, it ain't real folks. When you sell you city dwelling and move to the country, you will accomplish 3 things:
a - Destroy a farm tract that would have created food for you to feed your family and friends.
b - Go broke trying it or be severly injured. Possibly from hunger.
c - Become more dependant on corporate farming.
I see this selling real estate every day.
5 - Make an alliance with local farmers and shop only with those that do (hint) Walmart isn't locally grown, managed, or affiliated with American Grown.
6 - I've been switching over lately to solar, but I still get b ugs, hey, I'm outside and I hope the little buggers will keep polinating my plants.
7 - Turn off the TV before you get any dumber.
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