cross-posted from: https://lemmy.world/post/1443397
With office usage hovering near 50 percent of pre-pandemic levels, cities are putting the underutilized space to new use growing food
cross-posted from: https://lemmy.world/post/1443397
With office usage hovering near 50 percent of pre-pandemic levels, cities are putting the underutilized space to new use growing food
… 90% less energy? I’d love to see a citation on how on earth that is possible. This is a puff piece taken entirely from a few companies, taking their claims as truth. I’m not saying vertical farms don’t have their place, but how can they use 90% less energy while having to operate grow lights.
Vertical farms seem to have a lot of hype, and consequently I’ve seen mounting criticism. Lowtech magazine had a piece about how a solar paneled vertical farm actually uses more space than a regular one, if you account for solar panels, and are only cost effective because of fossil fuels.
edit: the link earlier in that sentence goes to a press release from IDTechEx, which does “independent market research.” These are marketing agencies who put out “reports” as self-marketing, hoping to be hired by companies to make more rosy reports on how great their industries are. It’s capitalist cargo-cult science, but even they seem to outright contradict the smithsonian magazine claim:
I call shenanigans on the energy usage claim. There’s no way it’s possible.