11 AMAZING FARMS YOU HAVEN'T SEEN BEFORE

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  • Опубликовано: 11 май 2024
  • Mind Warehouse ► goo.gl/aeW8Sk
    1) Dufttunnel Autostadt (Preview)
    • Dufttunnel in Rotation
    • Autostadt Wolfsburg - ...
    • the amazing Scent Tunn...
    2) SANANBIO ARK
    • SANANBIO ARK, the Mobi...
    3) AlgaeDemo
    • AlgaeDemo project | Au...
    4) FIT Farm Innovation Team GmbH
    • FIT GmbH Germany, emai...
    5) AeroFarms
    • AeroFarms
    • Why AeroFarms?
    • A first look at AeroFa...
    6) Iron Ox
    • Video
    • Video
    • Video
    • Video
    7.1) HydroGreen
    • Intro to HydroGreen’s ...
    • Virtual Tour: HydroGre...
    • Crosswind Jerseys Feed...
    • Indoor Hydroponic Anim...
    • HydroGreen's hydroponi...
    +
    7.2 Lely Group
    • Lely Dairy XL: Mormann...
    • Sparks Quaker Acres - ...
    • Lely North America: Fl...
    • Lely Vector Automatic ...
    • Lely Individualized Mi...
    • Evolution of the Lely ...
    • Lely Discovery mobile ...
    8) CubicFarms
    • Virtual tour of CubicF...
    • Feeding a Changing Wor...
    • Indoor Hydroponic Farm...
    • CubicFarms Farmer Part...
    9) Plenty
    • Plenty Farm Waltz Tour
    • Plenty - Tigris Farm
    • The Flavor Farmers: Be...
    10) Green Automation Fully Automatic Growing System
    • Green Automation Ful...
    11.1) NSK Havfarm
    • NSK - 3417 OFFSHORE FI...
    • NSK - 3417 Offshore fi...
    • NSK Havfarmen
    • NSK 2021 Aqua Nor
    +
    11.2) PAES W.A.T.E.R.
    • Tilapia Harvest at PAE...
    • Custom Fiberglass Tank...
    • Arvo-Tec Robotic Feede...
    • Pentair Aquatic Eco-Sy...
    • Fish swimming in two d...
    00:00 - AeroFarms
    01:08 - HydroGreen
    02:13 - Lely Group
    03:13 - CubicFarms
    04:13 - NSK Havfarm
    05:11 - PAES W.A.T.E.R.
    06:07 - Dufttunnel Autostadt
    07:00 - Plenty
    07:57 - FIT Farm Innovation Team GmbH
    08:54 - Iron Ox
    09:48 - Green Automation Fully Automatic Growing System
    10:41 - SANANBIO ARK
    11:45 - AlgaeDemo
    For copyright matters please contact us at: copymanager.mn@gmail.com Dance of the Pixies by Machinimasound licensed under Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 int’l / @incredible-qq2zi

Комментарии • 1,4 тыс.

  • @kevinm3751
    @kevinm3751 Год назад +123

    A friend of mine is a prepper and lives totally off grid and his garden is awesome! He took an old bank safe, buried it under his green house where he uses it to heat the green house and it is part of an indoor pond where he raises trout and filters the water that is then used to water the green house plants. It is the most successful green house I have ever seen!

    • @deathpyre42
      @deathpyre42 Год назад +1

      what kind of trout is it and where did he get it from?

    • @ericsimmons4868
      @ericsimmons4868 Год назад +5

      Sounds like an aquaponic system to me.

    • @daemonburns-waight2421
      @daemonburns-waight2421 Год назад +1

      What's he preparing for?

    • @kevinmithnick9993
      @kevinmithnick9993 Год назад +5

      @@daemonburns-waight2421 Maybe for wef

    • @Navigator777777
      @Navigator777777 Год назад

      What preppers are doing should not be thought of as weird. They are perhaps the most normal people on the planet. A healthy existence is normal but not possible eating food from corporate farms, being treated by medical profession and trusting pharmaceuticals. A genocide is ongoing. "Doctors are baffled". "Died Suddenly" is being sold as the new normal. Only those with eyes can see.

  • @alfilkemper9240
    @alfilkemper9240 Год назад +357

    I do wonder how much energy is used for the artificial lighting & how humane it is to still keep birds, cows, fish & even pigs confined to small areas.

    • @NothingByHalves
      @NothingByHalves Год назад +60

      Exactly. Never mind the welfare of the animal or the fact we are taking them away from their natural life. Not something I really want to see...

    • @ericliu5491
      @ericliu5491 Год назад +65

      Vertical farming is a false solution.
      Regenerative agriculture is the future.

    • @PozoBlue
      @PozoBlue Год назад +54

      Yeah, fish will develop so many diseases and even cannibalism when confined in small spaces in large numbers (even crustaceans) from the stress. The chicken seemed even more miserable, especially kept non stop under light (so they keep growing??) without being able to rest, all smothered next to each other. That floor he was shaking to take it out seemed awful. Their feet kept getting stuck and pulled :( Cant we do these things humanely? Geez makes me feel awful just watching

    • @bookswithatwist-vanvelzerp9262
      @bookswithatwist-vanvelzerp9262 Год назад

      Not only that - but the ROOT system that usually takes up minerals and other nutrients from the soil - well - they only get the little bits given in this system - meaning the food is NOT AS NUTRITIOUS as food used to be ....

    • @jimthain8777
      @jimthain8777 Год назад +16

      The best way to make those things better is to eat less of them.
      However, it is important to eat something of these for our nutrition.
      So don't cut it out all together.
      If we ate less, we'd need to grow less, which should mean each animal gets more room, and possibly better conditions.

  • @margitwes6495
    @margitwes6495 Год назад +258

    Great looking greens. The only thing lacking is taste.I never realized how tasteless store-bought greens are until I started growing them myself.

  • @system2thinker659
    @system2thinker659 Год назад +160

    We need smaller farms not larger, and more of them. However, the cold hard truth is, no matter how much food we grow on a world scale, if you can't afford to buy it, you won't be eating it. Millions of tons of food are exported out of countries who have starving populations.

    • @jimthain8777
      @jimthain8777 Год назад +9

      There's no reason small farmers couldn't use these solutions.
      With some of these technologies you could even farm in a desert!
      I think a small farmer could be taught how to use these systems to make his farm better, and his income too.

    • @cecilianambala6806
      @cecilianambala6806 Год назад +2

      @@jimthain8777 I definitely agree with you on that

    • @flyingpictures1100
      @flyingpictures1100 Год назад +9

      Not to mention how much food is thrown away or ploughed back into the ground when they can;t get the right price. Waste in the developed countries is phenomenal.

    • @0321Katie
      @0321Katie Год назад

      @@jimthain8777 education is the key... We need to educate all people and stop the greed. Elite dont want education, they just want puppets.

    • @pteechka1
      @pteechka1 Год назад +2

      Food losses in industrialized countries are as high as in developing countries, but in developing countries more than 40% of the food losses occur at post-harvest and processing levels, while in industrialized countries, more than 40% of the food losses occur at retail and consumer levels.

  • @somosgenel
    @somosgenel Год назад +332

    It is sad to see how brilliantly smart people waste their intellectual capacities developing weapons. Our world would hecka better if they used their brillance finding peaceful solutions to world problems. For example clean technology for food production

    • @stephenfriday1352
      @stephenfriday1352 Год назад +19

      There's more money made in weapons

    • @tommyfox854
      @tommyfox854 Год назад +11

      @@stephenfriday1352 Pretty much, yeah; especially here in the USA.

    • @abhipray1000
      @abhipray1000 Год назад +1

      Terroist going rule over us if everyone become coward cuck.

    • @abhipray1000
      @abhipray1000 Год назад +6

      Weapon is more important then this shit

    • @najibabdi9676
      @najibabdi9676 Год назад +8

      If these robots continue succeeding we will be jobless soon 🥺

  • @WeirdDevil
    @WeirdDevil Год назад +15

    Technological improvements yield so much potential. If only the soul-aspect wasn't just discarded as obsolete, the fruits would bear so much more value. #1

  • @blackberrypark99
    @blackberrypark99 Год назад +4

    Azaz! Van nap de mestersèges villágitással neveld! Ujabb pocsèkolása az energiának! Gratulálok!

  • @mandandi
    @mandandi Год назад +76

    Nice tech. I am always interested to see how these systems replace necessary soil microbes. Sadly, its all missing in this presentation, therefore the food thus produced lacks some chemicals we need from the soil. It will be years before they find out and make amends.

    • @SpiderF27
      @SpiderF27 Год назад

      They don't give a shit about us and the need of minerals and chimicals.
      All they care is their profits, period

    • @danielbaronne753
      @danielbaronne753 Год назад +10

      exactly. They have no idea how soil impacted the taste and quality of food

    • @kristinaquint9338
      @kristinaquint9338 Год назад +5

      Do a self-watering system where plants grow in soil but has water to maintain soil moisture through of a wick. Problem solve. Then you still have soil taste.

    • @kristinaquint9338
      @kristinaquint9338 Год назад +1

      Addition: Through the use of a wick

    • @adnel4142
      @adnel4142 Год назад +6

      They don't want to correct it. That way they can make sure we are malnourished and need to buy supplements. Just compare the nutritional value of broccoli as per 30 years ago and broccoli of today.

  • @themaskaraltd9235
    @themaskaraltd9235 Год назад +8

    It was a great video, the use of modern technology in agriculture is really amazing

  • @tom_greenery
    @tom_greenery Год назад +90

    The container farming thing is awesome. About 3yrs ago I came up with building out a container to grow strawberries vertically in Montana. Obviously could’ve been used for anything. I ended up considering sinking them in the ground to save on energy costs. Even considered a concrete shell in the ground wit a 2’ walk around that could be solar heated for the winters. They spend so much on importing fresh during non growing season

    • @keriandersen3538
      @keriandersen3538 Год назад +3

      I would like to learn more about it! I am an horticulturist in Northern Colorado.

    • @tom_greenery
      @tom_greenery Год назад +2

      @@keriandersen3538 Denver -2 todays high. Burrrrrrr. It’s all about the funding to pull it off. I have the drawings, suppliers, ect. Just need the right investor.

    • @kiwiprouddavids724
      @kiwiprouddavids724 Год назад +5

      Try growing citrus or stone fruit trees in pots you can graft a few different varieties onto one tree and have different fruits or fruits ripening at different times

    • @tom_greenery
      @tom_greenery Год назад +3

      @@kiwiprouddavids724 I do that with a couple different kinds of mangos

    • @kiwiprouddavids724
      @kiwiprouddavids724 Год назад +2

      @@tom_greenery it's a cool trick isn't it 👍

  • @divinenonbinary
    @divinenonbinary Год назад +6

    People in poorer regions aren’t deprived of food bc of how hard gardening is for them, it’s because we outsource our gardening to them and they end up having no access to food they’ve grown. So it’s about us taking responsibility to feed ourselves without interrupting entire regions local food production and market

  • @HelloThere-nz9ld
    @HelloThere-nz9ld Год назад +6

    It all comes down to energy. Lots of it.

  • @AhJodie
    @AhJodie Год назад +20

    This is extreemly interesting, but, it seems like the food would cost a lot because of the initial investment and maintenance has to be paid. It would be cool if the systems were small enough and cheap enough that people could do this in their homes. Thank you!

    • @fredricky7305
      @fredricky7305 Год назад +5

      I like decentralized and buy local and self sufficiency and touching and smelling the soil and admiring the plants grow. Automated takes out the secret ingredients, human spirit and love vibes.

    • @AhJodie
      @AhJodie Год назад +3

      @@fredricky7305 I like that too! When it is warm, and the sun is on the earth, it is amazing, I felt like I fell in love with the nature before, and when it rains, there is a different smell, and the touch on your feet and hands.... yeah, definitely. I do think though that a person, or family can get some of that experience with a small indoor garden, I have grown some things and it is so pleasing to see them while seeing snow out your window!

    • @adnel4142
      @adnel4142 Год назад +3

      Grow your own veggies and produce your own compost then you know what's in the food. Japan has gone seriously vending machines. All processed food. We need to eat fresh.

    • @michelleb3096
      @michelleb3096 Год назад +2

      Aero garden is an at home successful garden

    • @AhJodie
      @AhJodie Год назад +1

      @@michelleb3096 I have seen that. Floating garden too. Thank you.

  • @tegannottelling
    @tegannottelling Год назад +33

    There is a reason why you need pasture with cattle. When they are housed so close to one another (Such as a feed lot) the amount of antibiotics required goes through the roof. Out of every hundred or so Cows you will loss about 8 per week JUST because they are so tightly packed together. While I can see there are some good points to some of these farming methods.... that one sux

    • @hongkelly3612
      @hongkelly3612 Год назад +5

      Agree. Pepole nowadays are increasingly looking for free range products

    • @jimthain8777
      @jimthain8777 Год назад

      How would you feel about say, a building like this adjacent to a field?
      The cows would be let out regularly for exercise.
      Then rounded up and taken inside again.
      You could have 1 field used by several buildings.
      There are innovations that haven't come yet.

    • @Blackheathenly
      @Blackheathenly Год назад +4

      @@jimthain8777 How about no?

    • @adnel4142
      @adnel4142 Год назад

      @@jimthain8777 we do that to humans. It call prison and no one leads a healthy life. Furthermore if one animal becomes diseased most others will get infected. God created the earth in perfect balance. His way, nothing artificial or hasty is the only way.

    • @libbyworkman3459
      @libbyworkman3459 Год назад +1

      @@hongkelly3612 I always search for pasture-raised eggs in the grocery store. And years ago I agreed with Jane Brody that meat should be used just to flavor vegetables, not as the main course. And 2/3 of my family are vegetarian. We all drink nut-sourced milk these days. And I can’t remember the last time I ate any red meat.

  • @patrickwinther
    @patrickwinther Год назад +7

    Nice to see that the viewers are more critical than the channel itself. 👌

    • @patrickwinther
      @patrickwinther Год назад +2

      Feels like ads.

    • @animacuso100
      @animacuso100 Год назад

      So right :))
      In his defense I guess he can't be informed about every domain and after all he is a tech channel, "this new thing" it's up to the rest of us to discuss
      Much of this new tech has stuff that misses for it to replace the real thing, work in progress

  • @ananamu2248
    @ananamu2248 Год назад +52

    When I eat artificially grown crops I feel it misses something ...I've just realised ....air ,wind ,storms real sun earth ,contains a life-force....and the battering and overcoming of difficulties of nature creates a vegetable of substance

    • @tangoalpha1905
      @tangoalpha1905 Год назад +2

      Robust, rugged vegetables that can stand the trials of mother nature. Those are the vegetables for me. Not these weak, nutrient deficient, franken-foods.

    • @Metrion77
      @Metrion77 Год назад

      I'm sure these companies would LOVE to provide michelin-restaurant quality vegetables cheap enough for in need to afford, but this is REALITY and they're addressing costs, not quality. Transporting "vegetables of substance" from arable warm climates all the way to inner city chicago in the winter is both expensive as hell, burns a lot of fossil fuel, and they're gonna be days or weeks old by the time they hit shelves anyway, so that "substance" will have expired anyway. When you have a $15 dollar a month food budget, those 50 cent bushels of day-old "franken-veggies" are going to be a god send compared to the half-rotten "robust rugged vegetables" that are 4 bucks a serving.
      But congrats to you for having the disposable income to afford farm-grown foods and congrats for living close enough to arable land for locals to to have decent farms. Or congrats to you for having the free time and disposable income and arable land to grow your food yourself. I'm glad you are blessed by god(s) enough to not be one of the people who actually need the products being shown in this video

    • @tattooninja
      @tattooninja Год назад

      @@Metrion77 " $15 dollar a month food budget"
      ....LOL even food stamps pay way more than that, more than enough to live on. Who is on 15 a month for food?

    • @hetedeleambacht6608
      @hetedeleambacht6608 Год назад

      @@Metrion77 I hear you, and I`m not exactly in the sweet spot concerning my budget either. But for me it a question of: what life quality do I wish for me and the next generations to come? I believe you and me we deserve quality food, because its at the base of our potential. Heck, US and Europe are the richest nations in the world, and we cannot provide quality food, a basic provision, to our people?! Money in gouvernments is spent on trivials or luxuries to keep up the consumption rate, not on basic good standard provision for a broad public. Quality food should be priority nr. 1

  • @MissionaryForMexico
    @MissionaryForMexico Год назад +7

    I designed and built a hydroponics dump and fill automated system. I set the system up in a room, where I had control of tempeture, humidity, lighting, and even set up to deliver CO2 during day light hours. I grew 12 tomato plants, with a mother plant to get cuttings from. So at harvest I had buckets of the same exact tomatoes. Sold them at the farmers market. I only used organics fertilizer. I had shown the system to some farmers, they thought I should expand the system to handle 50 tomato plants!

    • @watchingmysunset
      @watchingmysunset Год назад +1

      sounds awesome. You should make a video or create a method and sell a packaged product.

  • @acethieling
    @acethieling Год назад +6

    Where’s the microbes and bacteria which enrich the vegetation to actually have nutrients in them ?????

  • @edwarddrost5299
    @edwarddrost5299 Год назад +5

    2:52 The concept I have never given much thought to; unusual udder shapes!😅☺🤔

  • @HermiregildoTV
    @HermiregildoTV Год назад +1

    I love this Video, not Only Because I love Vegetables But from cooking Filipino Food I also I Love farming and Planting more plant and trees.. Thanks @TechZone for sharing this wonderful videos

  • @altanika9545
    @altanika9545 Год назад +4

    Just discovered this channel and already been through tons of vids. Content is great!

  • @DBox137
    @DBox137 Год назад +4

    "The Roots Are Sprayed With A Special Mist." And that would be???

    • @taniayager3361
      @taniayager3361 Год назад

      More than likely a chemical not good for humans in the long term!

    • @unmeaninglessly143
      @unmeaninglessly143 Год назад +1

      Nutrient solution. Water mixed with fertilizer.

  • @michaelwiberg
    @michaelwiberg Год назад +2

    Rotating crop wheel design been investing alot of time with this system as in designing it. Just been learning better methods to advance and build up this process . Love the idea myself. There are many unusual concepts im looking into.have a good day ! Cool enough!

  • @user-lk1zz6sc1n
    @user-lk1zz6sc1n Год назад +1

    Everything is very cool!! It remains to find energy resources to make it work !!)))

  • @philcoppa
    @philcoppa Год назад +24

    how much energy do these use. Looked like a lot of artificial lighting.

    • @jimthain8777
      @jimthain8777 Год назад +3

      I'm going to bet that they are using LED lighting.
      This form of lighting uses much less energy.
      It is an important question though.

    • @capitalinventor4823
      @capitalinventor4823 Год назад +3

      @@jimthain8777
      It's all LED as it wasn't cost efficient to do with previous types of lighting. The question is not just how much energy is used but how much compared to the alternatives.
      Does it make sense to stop growing tomatoes just outside of the city in Spain and move the production inside a warehouse. The LEDs will never offset the savings in transportation energy. Other economics will come into play.
      What about growing tomatoes with one of these systems in Glasgow, Scotland instead of shipping them in by airplane from Spain? There's a lot of energy used to ship tomatoes by plane and the question becomes does it take less energy to run the LEDs in order to grow the tomatoes.

    • @brianfhunter
      @brianfhunter Год назад

      @@capitalinventor4823 - Dude, what about places that CANT grow anything, because of lack of space, temperature or pollution...
      Also, we already have the solution for the energy problem... NUCLEAR, people just need to learn that politicians and governments are the biggest cause of death, poverty and suffering in human history, specially today.

    • @MajimeTV
      @MajimeTV Год назад

      @@capitalinventor4823 I guarantee you only the initial costs were great, any continued costs are minimal because they likely use solar panels to power all of those LED lights

    • @tattooninja
      @tattooninja Год назад

      @@MajimeTV That's pretty funny. Absorbing sunlight, most of which is lost, into unsustainable solar panels that turn it into LED light...And people think this is more efficient than growing in sun?
      "any continued costs are minimal"
      ...Sure, if you ignore the endless costs of oil & multitudes of foreign-made parts, specialized technicians & repairmen, etc etc to run all those stupid robots.

  • @Camilovitj
    @Camilovitj Год назад +2

    Chickens: No - just NO! That's not a farm, that's a factory! No air, no sky, no dirt 😞

  • @jerskitty
    @jerskitty Год назад +8

    How does it stack up nutrition wise with vegetables grown organically?
    We have food now that fills you up but it's nutritionally deficient.

    • @bronya8108
      @bronya8108 Год назад +2

      The nutrients are more optimized as you can more closely control it with these systems.

  • @nathanhale7444
    @nathanhale7444 Год назад +25

    Sure they can grow a ton of food but is it as healthy as naturally grown crops?

    • @robertdouglas8895
      @robertdouglas8895 Год назад +2

      Conspicuously absent from the report. Robotic arms together with robotic people. Efficiency makes profit, not rewarding work duties.

    • @justagirlsd3000
      @justagirlsd3000 Год назад +3

      Probably all GMO’s🤮 farmed fish🤮 talapia🤮🤮🤮🤮

    • @trustnoone3216
      @trustnoone3216 Год назад

      nothing is natural no more

    • @matthewgoetter3127
      @matthewgoetter3127 Год назад +3

      No nutrients in the input will mean no nutrients at harvest. Soil is key

    • @tony98discovery
      @tony98discovery Год назад

      Of course not, the food on these modern farms can't be as good as the organic ones.

  • @ashoksarin2736
    @ashoksarin2736 Год назад +2

    Amazing technology!

  • @Ivaan_Sarkar
    @Ivaan_Sarkar Год назад +2

    It's a very excellent way to cultivate organic foods and other things. We should implement in our area also

    • @M3rVsT4H
      @M3rVsT4H 10 месяцев назад

      Fun Fact: Currently, Hydroponic food cannot be certified as Organic. The rules for Organic certification were cobbled together by some old dude based on how he thinks things should be grown. So, they were never good rules to start with, and they're just really out of date now. The whole thing is a bit of a scam.

  • @TimTimmay
    @TimTimmay Год назад +13

    AGRICULTURE + TECHNOLOGY = AGRICHNOLOGY
    **Great Video**

    • @TimTimmay
      @TimTimmay Год назад +1

      @@upallnightauto6234 Does somebody need a nap

    • @BrowncoatGofAZ
      @BrowncoatGofAZ Год назад +2

      Actually these days they call it “Biosystems Engineering” ✌️

    • @TimTimmay
      @TimTimmay Год назад +2

      @@BrowncoatGofAZ I know but that is so yesterday, AGRICHNOLOGY is the 2.0 version & AGRICOLOGY will be coming to a college campus near you

    • @dwightryder9564
      @dwightryder9564 Год назад +1

      AGRANOLOGY

    • @siskarno6278
      @siskarno6278 Год назад +2

      Agritech

  • @corvusmoneduloides7420
    @corvusmoneduloides7420 Год назад +3

    1. The world population should be brought under control.
    2. Animals cannot be treated as plants like that.
    3. The damage that intense animal and fish farming is causing the local ecosystem (soil and water) is always ignored.
    4. The world, and the west in particular, wastes an unbelievable amount of food. The food that is discarded is equivalent to the amount that is grown on 28% of the entire world's agricultural area. Tackling this will not be too difficult, and if food waste is addressed first and foremost, then such intense and abusive animal farming will not be necessary.

    • @WilhelmEley
      @WilhelmEley 5 дней назад

      Ok population control-communist....

  • @TASTYFOODSandEATING
    @TASTYFOODSandEATING Год назад

    wow so amazing. Great plat project. I like it very much

  • @olenduschannel7714
    @olenduschannel7714 Год назад +1

    wow... so great 11 AMAZING FARMS YOU HAVEN'T SEEN BEFORE

  • @kevinmithnick9993
    @kevinmithnick9993 Год назад +6

    so lovely. Some day humans will be farmed the very same way

  • @janebadon3988
    @janebadon3988 Год назад +3

    Centralized farming tends to suck for many different reasons. And, where’s the sunshine and pastures for the cows to move around, raise their young and enjoy their lives?

  • @anshulkumar4487
    @anshulkumar4487 Год назад +2

    It's great to see how Technology is improving environment

    • @MrDertien
      @MrDertien Год назад

      Unfortunately it's not improving your health.

  • @reanaldrogan9852
    @reanaldrogan9852 Год назад +1

    I show these to my grandma when she falls asleep, better than coffee

  • @tonyaquinoxx
    @tonyaquinoxx Год назад +6

    Aeroponics; Less and less and less, but the downside is a carbon footprint, and the cost for a pound of vegetables is $3 for electricity. The capital will cost 20 times more than traditional farming.

  • @williammccoll3404
    @williammccoll3404 Год назад +4

    Just what we need, more GMO food that is tasteless and unhealthy, thanks for showing us the future. I’ll grow my own.

    • @taniayager3361
      @taniayager3361 Год назад

      Soon the WEF Elitists will make it illegal for you to grow your own. They want us to become dependent for everything, weakening and depopulating us! The aim is to reach 1/2 a billion on the planet!

    • @williammccoll3404
      @williammccoll3404 Год назад

      @@taniayager3361 oh, I agree. That’s why I’m prepared for anything. I’m a combat veteran and have a crew.

    • @pteechka1
      @pteechka1 Год назад

      There aren't many gmo crops that would be practical for greenhouse/hydroponic systems.

  • @mosialive
    @mosialive Год назад

    I had to subscribe. I had a feeling that I had no choice but to subscribe because this content here is formidable. Thanks so much for uploading this.

  • @raghunaik269
    @raghunaik269 Год назад

    This is great investment and change of the future for harvesting any farms..great initiative...

  • @OrendaDesignStudio
    @OrendaDesignStudio Год назад +7

    Amazing 🥰🥰🥰🥰.

  • @bc-guy852
    @bc-guy852 Год назад +32

    Incredible. It's a good thing so many smart people are working on food production in unconventional methods as we race closer and closer to make all agricultural land unusable - from environmental factors or war related.
    Great episode!

    • @Starannify
      @Starannify Год назад +2

      Even when land gets polluted with heavy metals from weapons, road runoff, etc there is a whole...field? Job? around fixing it called "soil remediation". It is not easy or quick, but there are ways to extract various pollutants. I don't know what the techniques or methods would be used for chemicals, but I know that planting specific plants that draw up different heavy metals and then harvesting the plants to specially dispose of them can help. I know there are methods for chemicals I just don't know how and I assume it is very complex.
      This does not mean we shouldn't care about pollution, I am merely trying to help you not despair, as I once did, in thinking that things are lost forever or beyond my life to fix.

    • @flavor-addiction
      @flavor-addiction Год назад

      it's unusable because all the chemicals ALL countries trow onto crops!! Animals being locked in a few square meters and you thing it's smart? How happy were you during the lockdown? Plants are meant to receive sun, not artificial bulshit!

  • @ColinStudentoflife
    @ColinStudentoflife Год назад +1

    This is how we can become an interplanetary species!

  • @alghifariabi6303
    @alghifariabi6303 Год назад +1

    Wow, amazing farming with full technology, best result farming.

    • @robertdouglas8895
      @robertdouglas8895 Год назад +1

      Efficient but unsatisfying.

    • @danielbaronne753
      @danielbaronne753 Год назад

      @@robertdouglas8895 Not really efficient either when you consider the mount of energy needed to run such system

    • @robertdouglas8895
      @robertdouglas8895 Год назад

      I was thinking in terms of human labor. Farming contains physical work which keeps bodies in shape. It takes mental planning and working with nature which reflects ourselves in it. Machines have no soul.

  • @edwarddrost5299
    @edwarddrost5299 Год назад +10

    In a soilless farm, is the growing medium reusable or compostable? What happens to the inedible parts of the plants, like roots and vines (I saw tomatoes)? They could feed the plant parts to livestock, I guess, like on a traditional farm.

    • @yeetusdeletus9
      @yeetusdeletus9 Год назад +2

      in a soilless farm, there isn't really a growing medium. Chances are they're using hydroponics, would would mean the plant roots are suspended in a water/fertilizer solution. The solution either flows past the roots or the roots are touching solution that is being oxygenated by a air bubble pump or a combination of both. I have a similar setup at home where i use it to grow a few heads of lettuce, spinach and some herbs and i don't have to change the water, just add more periodically and run it through a filter. Its probably the least wasteful way of growing anything

    • @edwarddrost5299
      @edwarddrost5299 Год назад +2

      @@yeetusdeletus9 I see hydroponic as something different than soilless farming, even though it doesn't use soil. Some of these systems were using a type of foam in place of soil to hold the plants. What happens to that material after the plant is harvested? What do you do with anything left over after harvest?

    • @BrowncoatGofAZ
      @BrowncoatGofAZ Год назад +1

      Actually that’s been one of the tricky parts of hydroponics. Some media have different qualities than others, and not all of them are reusable or compostable. Rock wool is one such material.

    • @unmeaninglessly143
      @unmeaninglessly143 Год назад +2

      Depends on the media. Almost all are reusable. Some might decompose thus becoming a fertilizer.

  • @suemar63
    @suemar63 Год назад +3

    I know the "factory farmed" foods are tasteless. I wonder how they compare nutritionally. I know they receive the basic nutrients, but there are tons of things in the soil that are important....for our gut health, etc. Any info on this?

  • @AmazingPhilippines1
    @AmazingPhilippines1 Год назад

    Amazing technology. You have to feed the world's people. One concern with soil and hydroponics is the nutrition levels in the crops of course.

  • @SloveniaWalksAndViews
    @SloveniaWalksAndViews Год назад +1

    Really amazing farms!!!

  • @sovereignsoul
    @sovereignsoul Год назад +20

    This problem with this system of farming is that the plants are not robust and require constant watering and nutrients or they will die. Plants outside in soil do not need to be provided water or nutrients on a daily basis. With this in mind, once picked the factory farmed produce stores far more poorly than soil raised crops, lasting only half the time as their soil counterparts even when refrigerated. I suspect the factory farmed crops are not as nutritious either.

    • @pranramsamooj8187
      @pranramsamooj8187 Год назад

      Quite true on all points, in addition, there are increased start-up costs. However, there is a reduction in arable land worldwide and supply chain issues, especially in impoverished areas. In addition to digital agriculture, more emphasis is needed on training small-scale farmers how to maximize yields while reducing pesticide and herbicide usage. For example by employing more extension officers.

    • @sovereignsoul
      @sovereignsoul Год назад +4

      @@pranramsamooj8187 The increased start up costs relate to monopolization of the food supply. The big warehouse operations reportedly cost several hundred million dollars to build. This system uses less nitrates and nutrients than soil farming, and with increased international regulation of farming emissions (including nitrates) this sort of industrial farming is poised to monopolize the food supply. Better to grow your organic produce than rely on the altruism of billionaire monopolists.

    • @JCC_1975
      @JCC_1975 Год назад +1

      True. It really doesn't cost that much to grow your own and with companion planting and year round planting as well as the 3 yr rule you can actually grow almost all your food (if not all).

    • @BrowncoatGofAZ
      @BrowncoatGofAZ Год назад +1

      I can definitely see a possible robustness issue and work needing to be done on nutrition. However, it’s not that simple.
      The water and nutrients part could be due to a number of features, but I think one part is that they’re trying to grow the plants as fast as possible. If they consume faster, they need it more frequently. And I’ve actually seen some plants come back from lack of water for a few days in such systems.
      And the longevity of field plants is because they’re usually planted in enriched soil and watered heavily less frequently. They only Seem to consume less. When they’re harvested, the farmer needs to either rotate to a new field, or replenish the field with fertilizer, synthetic or organic.

    • @sovereignsoul
      @sovereignsoul Год назад +2

      @@BrowncoatGofAZ Agreed. I also think there is way more to soil than a simplistic formula of nitrates, phosphates, potassium, copper, calcium, and a couple of other minerals. In the same way the RDA for human nutrition "omits" 10,000 phytonutrients, I don't think the benefit of soil is fully recognized or appreciated.

  • @LosInmortalesGallos
    @LosInmortalesGallos Год назад +10

    One question I have about these hydroponic systems for fodder production is, what about the production of seeds? These systems (fodder production) are dependent on wheat, oat and other seeds and those seeds, as far as I know, are not hydroponically produced. So, if something were to happened to the production of those seeds the fodder wouldn’t be able to be produced. Just a curiosity I have.

    • @CD-kg9by
      @CD-kg9by Год назад +1

      Farmers grow the wheat on their fields.

    • @morobymoro
      @morobymoro Год назад

      Tru

    • @taniayager3361
      @taniayager3361 Год назад

      We have Gates, the demonic billionaire, stealing the seeds of the world and wanting to patent them!

    • @libbyworkman3459
      @libbyworkman3459 Год назад

      @ Los Inmortales. You do realize, don’t you, that there are many seed companies, and that they are able to buy plants and let them go to seed so that they can sell the seed to people like you and me to grow in our yards? We spend so much money on our military, and take it away from schools where it really belongs. Could you really not figure that out, that plants produce seeds if left alone?

    • @LosInmortalesGallos
      @LosInmortalesGallos Год назад +1

      @@libbyworkman3459 that’s was not my point. I’m fully aware that plants produce seeds and that there are farmers that produce seeds to sell to other people like you and I like you mentioned. But my point was that hydroponics is supposed to help reduce de consumption of water. But if the seeds are produce using conventional agricultural methods than that defeats the purpose of hydroponics. I guess my point was that the production of seeds should also use hydroponics to make the production cycle more planet friendly. I hope that clarify my previous point a bit.
      FYI - I spend part of my teenage years in the country side, so I know how different types of plants are propagate.

  • @mohanrana1314
    @mohanrana1314 Год назад

    I love farming and your video made my day🌸

  • @lada3264
    @lada3264 9 месяцев назад

    This is a absolutely important advance, People will be able to use these methods to grow food on their own thereby less hungry people and more independence.

  • @robertdouglas8895
    @robertdouglas8895 Год назад +4

    Robotic arms together with robotic people. Efficiency makes profit, not rewarding work duties.
    Local farms may not be as efficient in making profit, but they support the community with funds for local schools, and raise well adjusted children for those schools. Local farmers'' market allow town and farms to interact sharing ideas and having lots more fun than these factories. They also improve the fertility of the soil, care for the water resources, As they expand, they provide jobs and teach valuable skills preparing people for farms instead of factories.

  • @TaureanTrish
    @TaureanTrish Год назад +5

    I might not be around for too much longer, but watching your material gives me great hope.

  • @UristMcFarmer
    @UristMcFarmer Год назад +2

    I can't speak to the aquaculture items in this film, but for the agriculture items they're all a great way to keep coal fueled power plants in use. If we used basic Permaculture techniques (please look into it) we'd only need 6% of the land we're currently using for industrial farming and it would be fully sustainable, unlike industrial farming which systematically destroys the soil.

  • @AdemTVSiip
    @AdemTVSiip Год назад +1

    I hope those who find comments and deliberately read them may happiness be bestowed on them, amen

  • @cirrus6980
    @cirrus6980 Год назад +4

    Le pire, c'est qu'ils sont fières de nous montrer ça. Et si case trouve, ils croient vraiment à ce qu'ils font. Mama mia !

    • @tazxxx4119
      @tazxxx4119 Год назад

      La penso come te Cirrus!!!

  • @DougDobak
    @DougDobak Год назад +4

    I'm guessing you don't see how this is leading to the monopolization of food supply? Yay Monsanto!

    • @taniayager3361
      @taniayager3361 Год назад

      Control the food control the people! All by design and accelerating at a fast pace now as the WEFer politician puppets push Klaus Schwabs Agenda!

    • @pteechka1
      @pteechka1 Год назад +1

      These practices are available to anyone in the world , hard for any one company to control it when no company input is required.

  • @tony98discovery
    @tony98discovery Год назад

    *Chickens are locked in the farm all their lives and never see the sun until they are slaughtered*

  • @nerdy1701
    @nerdy1701 Год назад +1

    This is how we grass feed cows while keeping them in tight little boxes LOL

  • @moaxan
    @moaxan Год назад +14

    i have researched on most of these vertical , aquaculture farming, they require alot of capital!!!

    • @upallnightauto6234
      @upallnightauto6234 Год назад

      um no. theyre cheap and not hard to make.

    • @TimTimmay
      @TimTimmay Год назад +2

      @@upallnightauto6234 2 Month Old RUclips BOT Account

    • @moaxan
      @moaxan Год назад +2

      @@upallnightauto6234 how? the bedding used for staking is expensive, the electricity bill (lighting used in every inch) coz doing it indoors! the technology used

    • @BrowncoatGofAZ
      @BrowncoatGofAZ Год назад +1

      It’s true that CEA and other alternatives to field farming do have higher startup costs, and that can be cause for concern.
      However, there are several benefits
      1. Potentially year-round food production (and by extension income)
      2. Isolation from the outside environment (very important in the face of anthropogenic climate change)
      3. Efficiency of resource use, particularly with regards to water consumption.

    • @moaxan
      @moaxan Год назад +3

      @@BrowncoatGofAZ it could get 10 years (or mybe more) to cover the cost and start making profit!

  • @organiccleanfoodconnection
    @organiccleanfoodconnection Год назад +4

    Cows that are eating better than people. Microgreens saved my life. A steak is never going to do that. People wonder why there is such effort in growing leafy greens. It is because the truth of their benefit is coming to light. they must be hair loom organic to get the full vitamin benefit. The food industry will get greedy and destroy the word organic they’re already on that. Especially here in the United States. It’s up to us to grow something that is worth eating :-)

  • @tinacheez1450
    @tinacheez1450 Год назад +1

    Great videos and comments guys, here, have my like

  • @user-dt1xh7bx2t
    @user-dt1xh7bx2t Год назад +1

    احسنت بارك الله جهدك

  • @usawalk574
    @usawalk574 Год назад +7

    Informative video thanks for sharing

  • @lady_draguliana784
    @lady_draguliana784 Год назад +59

    a lot of these systems would be great ways to use the disused floorspace in all the empty buildings in big cities. I'd love to see Auto AG facilities mixed in with residential complexes in cities in the future, focusing more on residents and citizens and less on catering to Wall st.

    • @ananamu2248
      @ananamu2248 Год назад +3

      I can't understand why they don't use thesecgforcthe homeless

    • @raycrow3718
      @raycrow3718 Год назад

      If the lighting isn't dialed into the crop, the plants accumulate nitrates that can make them dangerous to consume.

    • @lady_draguliana784
      @lady_draguliana784 Год назад +1

      @@raycrow3718 quite true, but also corrected with relative ease 👍

    • @voidremoved
      @voidremoved Год назад

      @@ananamu2248 they want us all to be homeless

    • @kelradford374
      @kelradford374 Год назад +5

      @@ananamu2248 I would love to see these empty buildings renovated into both. Have 1 for the Homeless which would need work to bring them up to living ztandards and the next vacant building used for growing fruit and vege. Bypass supermarkets and have farmers markets in each suburb. Fresh food across the road or next door. Take part of the profits to repay the refurbishment of the bujldings for the homeless. Everyone can have a home and a full belly.

  • @saulogabrielmontanarorosa289
    @saulogabrielmontanarorosa289 Год назад +2

    Excellent Others 👍👍👍👍👍👍

  • @ladylakris
    @ladylakris Год назад

    Perfect for that large scale underground bunker, I'm sure is being built as we speak >_> Count me in!

  • @gnomegnirl5474
    @gnomegnirl5474 Год назад +4

    Whilst a lot of these ideas make good use of vertical space, the energy costs are concerning because they do not make use of natural light. How is this environmentally friendly when most of them require monitoring, lighting and whatnot, 24-7, which uses electricity?

    • @pteechka1
      @pteechka1 Год назад

      The benefits come from lower water demands, less space needed, and continuous production.

  • @johnberry1107
    @johnberry1107 Год назад +16

    Being productive enough to cover costs has proved difficult due to capital costs and energy use. Cheap labor drives these systems same as field growing. It is interesting to me that these experiments are taking place in rich countries with well fed populations where currently 1/3 of the food produced is wasted.

    • @bluebird2604
      @bluebird2604 Год назад +2

      They have money to invest , exportation has save a lot people from hunger.

    • @jimthain8777
      @jimthain8777 Год назад +1

      Much of our food in the "rich" countries, comes from all over the world.
      The transportation is where much of the loss/waste comes from.
      This is what they are trying to eliminate.
      Furthermore some of these technologies, could be used in poorer countries too.
      Imagine a container/building farm in a desert country where they don't normally grow their own food.
      Food security is a growing issue.
      These technologies help.

    • @pteechka1
      @pteechka1 Год назад

      Certainly foodwaste/spoilage is a larger problem in poorer countries, but better technology can address many of those issues, and it is improving.

  • @tizianadipadrana
    @tizianadipadrana 9 месяцев назад

    So beautiful

  • @blakespower
    @blakespower Год назад +1

    it looks very clean like too clean all that plant material and water equals mold, what chemicals are you using to stop mold?

  • @someoneelse7629
    @someoneelse7629 Год назад +3

    I had a friend who built an impressive hydroponic setup from foodgrade plastic pipes, some pumps, LED lighta and an arduino, he ran the entire setup from solar panels and batterys, he grew the best tomatoes I ever smoked...

    • @RobIn-ky4uz
      @RobIn-ky4uz Год назад

      Too bad he is behind bars now 😂

  • @leafygarden7941
    @leafygarden7941 Год назад +1

    Mashaallah 🤩 🤩 🤩 🤩

  • @michaelmitchell3271
    @michaelmitchell3271 Год назад

    Genius, all the way around, for everything thing involved

  • @wifu2will108
    @wifu2will108 Год назад +11

    So many of these sound so awesome and I was really enjoying the video. It even showing the new processes in dairy farming that makes the cows happier and healthier. Though you did forget to mention that the automated milker also distributes cookies for the cows to reward them.
    But then I watch in horror as baby chicks are dumped out of a container like yesterday's trash. With no regard to their tiny fragile bodies. I watch young birds struggle for footing and get their legs caught as the floor is ripped out from in under them. I see the clip of them turning a Cornish cross (a genetic abomination on its own who is destined at birth for a short painful life due to genetic health issues.) to reveal a bare belly that is caused by laying in their own waste to the point it burns away the feathers and even the skin if left too long. So much blatant abuse and bad husbandry while the narrator drones on about how this is supposedly better. Better for who? Certainly not better for the birds and sick and injured animals make a poor product for human consumption. Why not instead show the automated chicken tractors that give the birds the ability to naturally forage and give them access to the sunlight they require?

    • @incanada83
      @incanada83 Год назад

      Wifu2Will, Exactly!
      That would expose more cruelty, filth and worse.
      Too bad "Earthlings" is not part of a school curriculum, as well building blocks of soil ,so there wouldn't be need to use deadly pesticides.

    • @trainsandcups
      @trainsandcups Год назад +5

      Yeah the narrator is so casual and excited about the cruelty of factory farming. Gotta show support for the massive egg industry on "egg day"!

    • @estefaniaboujon6830
      @estefaniaboujon6830 Год назад +1

      Yeah, its delussional and scary

  • @elisabethviegas4462
    @elisabethviegas4462 Год назад +4

    Question? Do they taste any good and how much nutritional are they? As the fertiliser are full of toxins and have destroyed and depleted the soils of gold, silver, and precious metals that are needed to human bodies and also maintain the soil healthy.

    • @libbyworkman3459
      @libbyworkman3459 Год назад +1

      @ Elisabeth Viegas. Do you buy your food from the produce aisles of grocery stores? Then you have probably eaten greens grown in these sorts of warehouse farms. Did they taste good to you? Were they free from bug bites? Were they relatively clean? There are advantages to greens grown in places like this.

  • @EnglishLearnersHere
    @EnglishLearnersHere Год назад +1

    Technology is so amazing!

  • @mamaicupjayachanel2512
    @mamaicupjayachanel2512 Год назад

    wow..mantap..sangat luar biasa❤👍👍👍👉🤲🙏🙏🙏..

  • @davidmenham1782
    @davidmenham1782 Год назад +6

    Amazing technology but no information about the nutritional value of the crops grown or the health of the fish in the fish farms.

    • @BrowncoatGofAZ
      @BrowncoatGofAZ Год назад +1

      Depends on the company and the system, but it’s in the interest of most companies to make high-quality product. Nobody’s going to pay for low-quality product at audacious prices.

    • @HamguyBacon
      @HamguyBacon Год назад

      Fish Farms usually are toxic since the fish poop and urine are in high levels there aren't anything to filter it.

    • @BrowncoatGofAZ
      @BrowncoatGofAZ Год назад

      @@HamguyBacon actually most non-open-net systems have water filtration and purification systems. With net-based farms that is a big problem, however, especially for the local environment.

    • @journeywithnichole986
      @journeywithnichole986 Год назад +1

      @@BrowncoatGofAZ how do you explain everyone buying farm salmon in stores and restaurants? It’s everywhere now. And it is soooo disgusting. Growing up in Pacific NW, we onow what REAL salmon tastes like. Time to start buying food from small farmers. Grocery stores are for people that dont care what they are eating

    • @BrowncoatGofAZ
      @BrowncoatGofAZ Год назад +1

      @@journeywithnichole986 i understand some of that. However, the reason people farm salmon more is that wild stocks were overfished, same as many other species. And there are other farms that produce salmon more cleanly, it’s just more expensive than net farming.
      Regarding supermarkets, I honestly would prefer locally grown produce. The trick would be making that possible for more people. People shop from supermarkets because of price, most often. Sure, some of us can afford higher prices for local produce, but not all of us.
      If we could manage our oceans and local farms more sustainable and equitably, that would be amazing.

  • @zitaborba5040
    @zitaborba5040 Год назад +4

    The farms are great. The food production amazing. Unfortunately the animals are without any space as always. Fishes and baby are thrown from place to place.

  • @ashwins-iq7gv
    @ashwins-iq7gv Год назад

    Nice content it's good get inspired by these types of videos

  • @slemtv
    @slemtv Год назад +1

    Good jobs this Chanel the best

  • @garyz2043
    @garyz2043 Год назад +39

    It's a bit worrying. When I grow food in my garden it takes no energy,apart from the little I put in,nature takes care of the rest. All of these systems seem reliant on lots of electricity and power. The thing we should be moving away from!

    • @robertdouglas8895
      @robertdouglas8895 Год назад +2

      And gardening is much more satisfying that these factories. I suggest you research and find the accurate data on climate. I recommend Tony Heller.

    • @CD-kg9by
      @CD-kg9by Год назад +1

      Yeah, it's a bit questionable to "artificicate" every process at any cost. This kind of farming would make sense at the upper floor of supermarkets, but not as competition for conventional farming.

    • @BrowncoatGofAZ
      @BrowncoatGofAZ Год назад +4

      Technically it does consume energy. It just comes directly from the sun. And while it’s true that these farms could consume a lot of energy particularly from fossil fuels, they also allow for less land use. That and increased production are the primary benefits of the more high-tech farms.
      We’re already using half the arable lane on the Planet to feed ourselves. If we keep mostly using field farming (for crops at least), we’d literally have to chop down every forest and jungle left on the planet by 2050. Vertical farms and greenhouses are possible alternatives, not panacea for world hunger.
      Personally I like the idea of growing enough food for oneself in their backyard. But I’m not sure how possible that is. Especially for people who don’t have backyards.

    • @danielbaronne753
      @danielbaronne753 Год назад +6

      @@BrowncoatGofAZ Not true at all. Arable land is widely available. In fact, some farmers are being paid not to farm their land. What we need to do is adopted more sustainable farming practices.

    • @BrowncoatGofAZ
      @BrowncoatGofAZ Год назад

      @@danielbaronne753 I’d like to see a source before I believe the first part. I’ve seen data on what I said. Also it’s widely available For Now. That won’t always be true.
      I do believe the second part, though. And I think it should be more widely done. And I completely agree on the third.

  • @SurvivalSquirrel
    @SurvivalSquirrel Год назад +6

    This might be amazing, but indoor farming with the use of a lot of power isnt thath realistic in the future...

    • @bronya8108
      @bronya8108 Год назад +1

      Pretty realistic actually with future climate instability making outdoor crops more at risk of damage and increased access to renewable energy sources.

  • @SheperdCenterPathways_isLove22
    @SheperdCenterPathways_isLove22 Год назад +2

    Publix could have an IRON OX system "up stairs" at each store.

  • @dansonkibera2217
    @dansonkibera2217 Год назад +1

    This hi tech Farming can support life anywhere even on Mars.

  • @abelincoln9026
    @abelincoln9026 Год назад +3

    Feed the cows grass not grain

  • @richardhowe5583
    @richardhowe5583 Год назад +10

    How much nutrition is in that food.. most food grown in a garden gets its nutrition from the soil.. I think eating that food is kind of like eating hay.. it might fill you up but you will not get any nutrients vitamins and minerals.. I'll take a good organic farms vegetables over this any day.. America and most of the world has plenty of land area it's just people want to gang up in the cities.. I am always amazed at the new technology.. thanks for the video because it is really interesting..

    • @TheModularian
      @TheModularian Год назад +4

      All hydroponic farming solutions factor in proper nutrient supplies as well. They're not JUST giving them plain water. It's actually easier to make sure each specific crop gets the exact conditions it needs, via nutrients, temperature, and light. A quick google search shows that about 40% of the U.S. is farmland. That is literally so much wasted space, doubly more so when you factor in the spoilage of what they even produce in the first place. The efficiency of these methods really knock down any excuse NOT to use them. Conservatively speaking, even a crappy hydroponic farm is 3x more productive given the same space. (non-stacked designs) They're 90% more water efficient. If you manage them actually WELL, instead of CRAPPY, that productivity can more than triple to a staggering 10x more productive, and most crops can be grown quicker. Some can be grown even twice as fast. Translating this into actual numbers for you: even assuming the worst rates, the U.S. could free up almost 27% of it's acreage, without reducing yield quantity, quality, or growth time. If we went with good numbers, the U.S. could free up 36% of it's acreage, without reducing yield quantity, quality, and end up producing the same yields in half the time. The Agriculture Industry uses 80% of the countries consumption of water. 80%. And with hydroponics. (HYDROPONICS, Not even the AEROPONICS in this VIDEO that are EVEN MORE EFFICIENT) 90% of that 80% could be conserved. A 2018 agriculture report stated a consumption of 83.4 million acre-feet of water. With Hydroponics, that consumption would have been 8.34 million acre feet of water. (Just for your own convenience, please note that 1 acre foot of water ~ 325851 gallons) The only real negative to these new fancy efficient technologies, are the upfront costs of switching to them. But just like solar panels, they'll pay for themselves.

    • @richardhowe5583
      @richardhowe5583 Год назад +2

      @@TheModularian I do believe what you say and I know absolutely nothing about technology.. I am in my late 60s and I struggle everyday with this smartphone.. I am glad our young people are learning about technology and creating methods to help people because it makes me feel good that the young people in our country is going to do great things to help people in our country and around the world.. thank you very much for what you do and thank you for showing it to everyone and telling us about it and educating us.. 👍👍 thanks 👍👍

    • @rogerjensen5277
      @rogerjensen5277 Год назад

      @@TheModularian You talk as if you think that water gets wasted, no, the vast majority of irrigated (and non-irrigated) water evaporates and eventually returns to Earth as rain or snow. Mother Earth is with the exception of sunlight and the occasional asteroid a closed system. Nature doesn't have waste, this is a man-made concept! The more we get away from the natural systems than the more we will struggle to survive. Nature isn't out of balance, mankind is, 1HW1WC (one healthy woman, one healthy child), this is the only 'fair' way to reduce human overpopulation! We must grow up as a species or nature will brush us aside! No, I'm not a tree hugger, they live on a different plane of life than humans do so a hug (if even felt) would be meaningless to them.

    • @HamguyBacon
      @HamguyBacon Год назад +4

      @@TheModularian Good food isn't just about nutrients, it requires good microbes, sunlight, Co2 intake and other factors.

    • @AK-ze7ro
      @AK-ze7ro Год назад +1

      @@TheModularian While I'm sure you are quoting actual recorded figures about water consumption and acreage it does not answer about the nutritional value of the food. Developing the technology for situations like long term space travel may prove useful. It seems a bit arrogant of us to assume that we have the understanding of the intricacies of the world we live in, let alone try to imagine that we can control it. A study has shown that there is a drop in lycopene production between a tomato grown in a greenhouse and one grown outside. So a plant grown outside of its natural microclimate is expected to grow healthier?

  • @altanika9545
    @altanika9545 Год назад +1

    Love this channel

  • @technewsus
    @technewsus 2 месяца назад

    Agricultural technology is increasingly developing strongly

  • @jeannetteellis2034
    @jeannetteellis2034 Год назад +5

    I would like to know exactly what they are spraying in the roots of these plants that people consume!

    • @robertdouglas8895
      @robertdouglas8895 Год назад +1

      Conspicuously absent.

    • @pteechka1
      @pteechka1 Год назад +1

      The nutrients would be different for different crops

    • @bronya8108
      @bronya8108 Год назад +1

      Nutrient solutions containing everything the plants need at the right times, like nitrogen, phosphorus, potassium etc. These can be synthetically or organically sourced depending on what each farm chooses.

  • @metaljacket866
    @metaljacket866 Год назад +8

    All of these innovations seem to be geared mainly towards producing food in a world without cheap energy from the sun, or one lacking.a biosphere .

    • @tony98discovery
      @tony98discovery Год назад

      Have you ever been to such a modern farm?

    • @metaljacket866
      @metaljacket866 Год назад +1

      @@tony98discovery no , they are amazing though , and if one has the money to spend on that intricate system of lighting , rotating crop , watering
      and if lacking the space for even a large greenhouse which would be less cost ..then these would be great ideas .. ..but at a higher cost to build and maintain probably a lot higher than say , a field or greenhouse ..in my opinion .

    • @tony98discovery
      @tony98discovery Год назад +1

      @@metaljacket866 Yes, most of these are farms belonging to large agricultural companies or corporations

    • @metaljacket866
      @metaljacket866 Год назад

      @@tony98discovery well I have no doubt with the large grow operations in the recent booming market that got legalized in so many states ..

    • @shaun469
      @shaun469 Год назад

      The clear roof on most of these videos says your wrong

  • @MycoJay
    @MycoJay Год назад +1

    Here’s a tip for ya. Learn how to grow Lions Mane and many of micro greens. Won’t take you 2 days and you’ll have all the knowledge to grow easy produce in your own home. People do that, you then hold the power for yourself as your food is what you grow and get some chickens for eggs. Learn to fish for fish. You got it made 😎

  • @obitotobias7119
    @obitotobias7119 Год назад

    incredible great amazing inventions

  • @user-kp9mp3hm8z
    @user-kp9mp3hm8z Год назад +9

    Коровки практически без выгула. Растения без натурального солнца

    • @jambo8167
      @jambo8167 Год назад

      Более того семена после ГМО 😁

  • @sumcd6348
    @sumcd6348 Год назад +5

    Its sad that they are not free to be outside and go free range!!!

    • @annamaclennan8125
      @annamaclennan8125 Год назад

      Agree,,battery raised cows and fish!! Find it very disturbing!

  • @MrARMRM
    @MrARMRM Год назад +1

    Best Op Ive seen ever

    • @MrARMRM
      @MrARMRM Год назад

      You'd be surprised by what led light can do. Color, size, texture and YES flavor. It's amazing