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Inside China's 'smart vegetable farm': Autonomous greenhouse allows plants to grow without soil or sunlight
PUBLISHED: 08:06 BST, 9 July 2018
These luscious leafy greens sprout from stackable trays in a confined room - without the need of a single drop of pesticide, natural sunlight or soil.
In what could be the future of agriculture in China, a company in Anxi, Fujian province, has been developing a smart farm that enables vegetables to grow efficiently in an automated environment.
The firm's latest expansion project - a 5,000-square-metre (53,819-square-foot) indoor farm - has been under development for the past two years and was finally unveiled last Friday.
Eight to 10 tonnes of vegetables are produced every day on the farm, which is almost the size of a football pitch. That amount of vegetables would be enough to feed nearly 36,000 people, according to Sanan Sino-Science, the company behind the project.
In what could be the future of agriculture in China, a company in Anxi, Fujian province, has been developing a smart farm factory that enables vegetables to grow efficiently in an automated environment
The firm's latest project - a 5,000-square-metre (53,819-square-foot) indoor farm - has been under development for the past two years and was finally unveiled last Friday. The new farm can produce between eight to 10 tonnes of veggies daily
The massive incubation room requires only four staff members to manage - compared with about 300 farmers required in conventional farmlands to produce the equivalent amount.
People in China consume an average of 276 grams (9.7 ounces) of vegetables every day, according to the National Institute for Nutrition and Health.
'Compared with our first generation smart farm, this new plant yields even more effective results while reducing labour and environmental costs,' Sanan Sino-Science CEO Zhan Zhuo told MailOnline.
The company was founded in 2015 by San'an Group and the Chinese Academy of Sciences' Institute of Botany.
Its first generation plant factory, which covers an area of 10,000 square metres (1 hectare), is claimed to be the world's largest vertical farming complex.
The smart farming method, which practises growing vegetables and herbs in multilevel cultivation beds of hydroponic solutions in a controlled environment, is equipped with highly advanced autonomous technology.
The smaller-sized varieties can be harvested in 18 days while larger vegetables take between 33 and 35 days
An automated converter belt was also seen transporting the plates of crisp green veggies for packaging
Scientists donning a full biohazard gear with goggles, faces masks, rubber gloves and boots while examining the veggies
The confined indoor space has a strict system that regulates temperature, water source, humidity, nutrients and LEDs that replace sunlight.
'This maximises the plant's growth potential while maintaining a sustainable and continuous growth cycle,' Mr Zhan said.
In the factory, the smaller-sized varieties can be harvested in 18 days while larger vegetables take between 33 and 35 days, he added. Vegetables in a conventional farm need about 40 to 60 days to reach maturity, which is also highly dependable on weather conditions.
At full capacity, when the energy cost is neglected, the smart factory can produce 3,000 tonnes to 3,500 tonnes of leafy greens per year.
Video footage of the gigantic smart plant shows factory workers donning a full biohazard gear with goggles, faces masks, rubber gloves and boots while examining and patrolling rows of rainbow coloured LED-lit shelves.
Various plants including lettuce, basil and bok choy are seen growing on large white trays in tiny allocated slots, submerged in nutrient solutions that are essentially free of soil.
Sanan Sino-Science's first generation plant factory is claimed to be the world's largest vertical farming complex
These vegetables taste less bitter and possess higher nutritional value compared with other conventionally grown plants
- Futuristic farm maximises growth potential of plants and is 75 times more efficient than conventional farming
- 54,000 sq ft plant in Fujian, south-east China, can produce eight to 10 tonnes of vegetables every day
- The system automatically regulates temperature, water, humidity, nutrients and LEDs that replace sunlight
PUBLISHED: 08:06 BST, 9 July 2018
These luscious leafy greens sprout from stackable trays in a confined room - without the need of a single drop of pesticide, natural sunlight or soil.
In what could be the future of agriculture in China, a company in Anxi, Fujian province, has been developing a smart farm that enables vegetables to grow efficiently in an automated environment.
The firm's latest expansion project - a 5,000-square-metre (53,819-square-foot) indoor farm - has been under development for the past two years and was finally unveiled last Friday.
Eight to 10 tonnes of vegetables are produced every day on the farm, which is almost the size of a football pitch. That amount of vegetables would be enough to feed nearly 36,000 people, according to Sanan Sino-Science, the company behind the project.
In what could be the future of agriculture in China, a company in Anxi, Fujian province, has been developing a smart farm factory that enables vegetables to grow efficiently in an automated environment
The firm's latest project - a 5,000-square-metre (53,819-square-foot) indoor farm - has been under development for the past two years and was finally unveiled last Friday. The new farm can produce between eight to 10 tonnes of veggies daily
The massive incubation room requires only four staff members to manage - compared with about 300 farmers required in conventional farmlands to produce the equivalent amount.
People in China consume an average of 276 grams (9.7 ounces) of vegetables every day, according to the National Institute for Nutrition and Health.
'Compared with our first generation smart farm, this new plant yields even more effective results while reducing labour and environmental costs,' Sanan Sino-Science CEO Zhan Zhuo told MailOnline.
The company was founded in 2015 by San'an Group and the Chinese Academy of Sciences' Institute of Botany.
Its first generation plant factory, which covers an area of 10,000 square metres (1 hectare), is claimed to be the world's largest vertical farming complex.
The smart farming method, which practises growing vegetables and herbs in multilevel cultivation beds of hydroponic solutions in a controlled environment, is equipped with highly advanced autonomous technology.
The smaller-sized varieties can be harvested in 18 days while larger vegetables take between 33 and 35 days
An automated converter belt was also seen transporting the plates of crisp green veggies for packaging
Scientists donning a full biohazard gear with goggles, faces masks, rubber gloves and boots while examining the veggies
The confined indoor space has a strict system that regulates temperature, water source, humidity, nutrients and LEDs that replace sunlight.
'This maximises the plant's growth potential while maintaining a sustainable and continuous growth cycle,' Mr Zhan said.
In the factory, the smaller-sized varieties can be harvested in 18 days while larger vegetables take between 33 and 35 days, he added. Vegetables in a conventional farm need about 40 to 60 days to reach maturity, which is also highly dependable on weather conditions.
At full capacity, when the energy cost is neglected, the smart factory can produce 3,000 tonnes to 3,500 tonnes of leafy greens per year.
Video footage of the gigantic smart plant shows factory workers donning a full biohazard gear with goggles, faces masks, rubber gloves and boots while examining and patrolling rows of rainbow coloured LED-lit shelves.
Various plants including lettuce, basil and bok choy are seen growing on large white trays in tiny allocated slots, submerged in nutrient solutions that are essentially free of soil.
Sanan Sino-Science's first generation plant factory is claimed to be the world's largest vertical farming complex
These vegetables taste less bitter and possess higher nutritional value compared with other conventionally grown plants