Environmental case for vertical farming stacks up – according to new study
Growing lettuce on stacked shelves in high-tech greenhouses could be as good for the environment as growing them in fields and could save 8,000 hectares of land in the UK, according to a new study from the Âé¶¹ÊÓÆµ and the University of Aberdeen.

Researchers studied a vertical lettuce farm in the UK. They found it produced the equivalent of 740g of carbon dioxide (CO2) per kilo of lettuce. This was comparable to growing in a field – but used a lot less land.
In vertical farms, shelves of crops like lettuce or herbs are stacked on top of each other in a controlled environment. Plants can grow without soil – drip-fed with nutrient-rich water or even with mist sprayed onto their exposed roots.
In the lettuce farm studied, electricity use made up nearly 40% of its total climate change impact. As such, the climate impact of vertical farming depends a lot on how that electricity is generated.
The researchers also studied other environmental impacts like land use, water use, and water pollution.
The link to the study can be found .
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