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Indoor farming companies set sights on China

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2019-09-09 10:35:24China Daily Editor : Li Yan ECNS App Download

An employee works in the growing facility in Shanghai of AEssenseGrows, a Silicon Valley-based indoor farming company. (Photo/China Daily)

Safety is a selling point as indoor space creates a pesticide-free environment

While indoor farming companies race to transform the future of food production, they have set their sights on China to capitalize on the country's growing demand for food production and food safety.

"Vertical farming is going to become important everywhere, and China does have these massive populations inside cities because people are leaving the countryside into the cities," said Roger Royse, a lawyer and founder of AgTech Innovation Network in Silicon Valley.

In vertical farming facilities, plants, such as vegetables, flowers and herbs, are grown in stacked layers with a software-managed system regulating temperature, water, nutrients and LED lighting that replaces sunlight.

"The technology is getting so good that people are able to grow crops in the inner cities. I think that's going to be another big thing," said Royse.

One of the advantages of vertical farming is that the controlled environment won't be affected by adverse natural conditions that conventional farmland often faces, said Wu Zhongbo, vice-general manager of Shanghai Xinghui Vegetables.

His company purchased an aeroponics system from a US indoor farming company in 2017 and has since been exploring the technology. Aeroponics is the process of growing plants in an air or mist environment without the use of soil or an aggregate medium.

"We have verified the technology and now we are studying the economic feasibility," said Wu. "The cost for infrastructure and equipment depreciation is still too high, compared to conventional farming."

But to Chinese consumers, safety would be a selling point since the confined indoor space creates a pesticide-free environment, he said.

Despite the cost challenges, some Silicon Valley indoor farming startups are gearing up to tap into China's growing demand for organic foods as the fast-growing middle class with more buying power is willing to spend more on higher-quality produce.

"A head of organic lettuce sells at 35 yuan ($4.9) in high-end grocery stores in Shanghai. Our targeted customers are those who are price-insensitive," said Wendy Chen, vice-president of AEssenseGrows, an indoor farming company in Silicon Valley.

Demonstration

The company has a facility in Shanghai, primarily for demonstration of their indoor growing systems. Some of the vegetables produced in the facility are sold in local grocery stores.

The lettuce grown in that facility, though not labeled as "organic", sells for about 25 yuan ($3.5) per head, said Chen. To appeal to consumers and to increase economic value, the company is growing seasonal salad greens or exotic varieties, such as ice plants, she said.

The company has recently partnered with a major state-owned company in Shanghai to build a vertical farming facility covering a space of 5,000 square meters in the city. The project, which is in the process of getting authorities' approval, is expected to enter production next year, said Chen, who didn't disclose further details.

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