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Organic Produce to Urban Populations

Backyard hobbyists, university researchers, nonprofits, restaurants and even inmates at a federal prison in Indiana are growing food using aquaponics, a technology for raising fish and plants together in a recirculating system. So far, though, no one has been able to build a large-scale, commercial aquaponics business.

In an abandoned brewery in St Paul, Minnesota, a startup company called Urban Organics is trying to change that. Since last spring, Urban Organics has been raising tilapia, basil and lettuce, with the help of a much-bigger neighbor – a $7bn industrial company called Pentair that believes that aquaponics is on the verge of becoming a viable form of farming.

Aquaponics combines aquaculture (fish farming) and hydroponics (growing plants in water). Fish – in this case, about 3,200 tilapia – are raised in big tanks made of high-density polyethylene. Their wastewater flows out of the tanks, gets cleaned up a bit and is pumped to the growing beds, where it becomes food for the plants. After the plants extract nutrients from the water, it’s filtered again and returned to the fish tanks. While the process is energy-intensive – the plants need artificial light to grow indoors – food can be grown year-round in urban areas, near to markets.

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“What happens when you locate a food production facility to a place that needs urban renewal?” asks Fred Haberman, a founder and part-owner of Urban Organics.

The logic behind Pentair’s interest is clear: the company, which is based in Manchester, England, and whose main US offices are in Minneapolis, makes precision irrigation equipment for farmers, as well as energy-efficient pumps, advanced filtration technology and wastewater treatment systems used in many businesses, including aquaculture. Aquaculture generates about $75m in annual revenues for Pentair, aquaponics a much smaller amount.

“We’re going to figure out how to commercialize this better than others,” says Todd Gleason, who is senior vice president for global growth at Pentair. “This concept is still new. We’re learning all the time.”

To that end, Pentair provided the design engineering and donated the water management system being used at Urban Organics. The startup also got a boost from the city of St Paul, which acquired the former Hamm’s Brewery for $1.2m back in 2001 but sold the building to Urban Organics for just $35,000. Urban Organics has invested about $1m in renovations.

While other startups, notably BrightFarms, grow food in cities, aquaponics firms have the unique ability to produce both fish and plants, including herbs, lettuces and kale, year-round and deliver them to supermarkets on the day they are harvested.

It’s too soon to judge the success of Urban Organics – tilapia take about nine months to mature, so the company hasn’t sold its first batch yet – and the company recently shifted its mix of plants away from lettuces and towards basil because herbs generate higher margins. It hopes to expand within the brewery, perhaps to grow salmon or trout, and it is going to save energy costs by replacing incandescent bulbs with super-efficient LEDs.

“This is an experiment,” says Haberman. “We’re going to make mistakes because it’s never been done before. Farmers need to be smart and adapt.”

But, he adds: “The economics are starting to look good.”

Habermas is a veteran marketing guy with a commitment to organic food; his firm’s clients have included the dairy cooperative Organic Valley and Annie’s Homegrown. He and his partners credit Will Allen, whose nonprofit Growing Power has developed urban farms in Chicago and Milwaukee, including an aquaponics facility, with inspiring their work.

Elsewhere, other aquaponics startups are taking hold. One of the biggest is Farmed Here which operates just outside Chicago and sells organic baby greens and herbs through 45 Whole Foods and other supermarkets nearby. The farm has operated since early 2013 and its chief executive, Mark Thomman, said business is brisk.

“We have more demand than we have production,” Thomman said. “We’re expanding.”

In Winter Garden, Florida, meantime, Green Sky Growers operates an aquaponic farm on a rooftop, producing lettuces, herbs and tilapia. Smaller-scale commercial facilities operate in Florida and California, and Dr James Rakocy, one of the world’s leading experts on aquaponics, has estimated that there are 3,500 hobbyists who grow fish and plants using aquaponics and another 1,000 systems in schools.

None of this guarantees that aquaponics will ever become a real business. But Pentair’s Todd Gleason is optimistic.

“Things move quickly when you have a proven model,” he said. “You have to fail fast and cheap, and be committed to long-term success.”

Leapfrogging to Nutritious Food Systems

By 2030, more than 60 percent of the world’s populations will live in cities. This creates an enormous food system challenge, particularly when you consider that most of the urban growth between now and 2030 will occur in Africa and Asia. These regions already suffer from high malnutrition rates and are more vulnerable to climate change and price shocks because of their heavy reliance on markets.

Until now, the development sector has paid little attention to urban populations and there is, therefore, limited knowledge of the complex mechanisms of urban food and health systems in low and middle income countries. It is, however, known that inequality spans both across and within cities. The lowest quintiles of urban populations can be as vulnerable, if not more, than their rural counterparts.

In high-income countries, the issue of urban food systems has already started to come to the forefront of local policy agendas. Urban food systems must now become an international development priority if we are to feed growing city populations in low and middle income countries.

Providing everyone with a healthy and sustainable diet will require innovative approaches and, crucially, the rapid advance of new technologies. Low and middle-income countries leapfrogged straight to mobile phone technologies, bypassing the growth of landlines in high-income countries. Many are now asking whether we can we do the same with food system innovations.

Already in high income countries, there has been an increased interest in urban agriculture through initiatives such as city farming, rooftop gardens and locally sourced movements such as farmers markets. This has led to the rise of Controlled Environment Agriculture (CEA), the umbrella term for urban farming techniques such as hydroponics, aeroponics, aquaponics, farming using LED grow lights and vertical farms. If CEA’s efficiency increases and its costs go down, CEA could contribute substantially to improving urban food and nutrition security. These new methods of agriculture actually provide many advantages over traditional methods because they shorten the supply chain and are environmentally sustainable

One example is the London-based “Growing Underground” project, which uses a system of hydroponics and LED grow lights to produce vegetables in underground tunnels built during World War II as bomb shelters. This is just one example of cities turning redundant and abandoned spaces into agricultural space. Vertical farms, such as the Plantagon in Linköping, Sweden and Sky Greens in Singapore, are farms built in tall buildings that could grow food on a large scale within mega cities. The “CityFarm Initiative” at MIT’s Media Lab, founded by Caleb Harper, aims to add large vertical farms to office buildings. These farms can use natural sunlight or LED lights and grow hydroponically or aeroponically. China has already invested in research to look at whether these vertical farms can be integrated into its rapidly urbanizing spaces.

Improving the cold chain by making it cheaper and more efficient can also increase access to fresher, nutritious foods for low-income households. Inventions such as the solar powered fridge by The Fridge Factory and Danish Technical Institute (GTZ) and Ian Tansley’s Sure Chill fridges that can remain cold for 12 days without power are environmentally friendly and can be used in places with low electricity infrastructure. In the developing world these kinds of technologies are being adopted in areas where power for traditional cooling methods are often too costly or simply unavailable. The Zero-Energy Cooling Chamber is one such technology. Cheap and easy to build using just adobe bricks, sand and water, this sandbox-size contraption produces evaporative cooling chambers that can reduce the temperature of nutrient-dense vegetables and fruits by 15 to 20 degrees, extending their life by a couple of days.

Apps have now also started transforming the food system. Many CEA and urban agriculture systems can be enhanced by connected mobile technologies that indicate the overall health and nutritional requirements of an individual plant. Online grocery stores can also shorten the supply chain and create less food and carbon waste because they deliver only what people are ordering from local suppliers. One example comes from South Korea where they have implemented grocery aisle posters next to bus and metro stops that allow consumers to shop using just a smartphone’s camera. With Sub Saharan Africa alone expected to have 930m mobile subscriptions by 2019 there is enormous potential for city and rural populations alike to use and create technologies that enhance the food system.

Innovations like these are in the early stages and many of them are still just pilots. But if taken to scale they could make a big impact on food security for the 5 billion people living in cities by 2030.

To provide nutritious and environmentally sustainable diets for city populations now and in the future, our food system must be revolutionized. This means finding opportunities along the entire value chain to deliver healthier, more nutritious diets for rural and urban populations alike. It means focusing on development goals that relate to the future, not what we’ve experienced in the past. We can’t predict which technologies will have the most impact on the future food system, but we can create a framework for learning and sharing what works on a global basis.

Namibia planning tilapia festival to promote farm startups

In a bid to promote the production and consumption of tilapia, and to generate interest among Namibians and community groups in starting fish farms, Namibia is set to hold its first tilapia festival.

Deputy minister of fisheries and marine resources, Chief Samuel Ankama, and Johan van der Westhuizen of Uis Aquaculture Farm, will host the first Ntunda Tilapia Festival on May 23 May.

The main activity during the festival will be a cooking competition. Participants will have to prepare a meal consisting of four courses: a snack plate, appetizer, main course and dessert. Tilapia must be an ingredient in each course.

Tilapia will be supplied by the Uis Aquaculture Farm, but participants in the competition must provide all additional ingredients.

“Tilapia fish, which is now being cultivated throughout the world, has its origin in Africa,” said Van der Westhuizen. “Our people must be encouraged to appreciate and utilize indigenous products. This festival will also strive to bring together African people from various walks of life and specifically contribute to nation building.”

Apart from the main activity, a presentation of a recirculation aquaculture system, with integrated aquaponics, will be conducted by Uis Aquaculture.

Aquaponics: a sustainable solution to food insecurity?

What is aquaponics?

Aquaponics is a way of producing food that combines aquaculture (farming aquatic animals such as snails and fish) with hydroponics (cultivating plants in water) in a symbiotic environment.

How does it work?

The aquatic animals feed on the plants, and the water is fed through a system which breaks down the fishes’ excretions into nitrates and nitrites, which are nutrients for the plants. So there’s no need to buy extra food for the fish.

Could aquaponics be used by farmers in developing countries?

“Aquaponics has huge potential to be used by developing countries – both as commercial ventures and a way to provide food,” says Leslie Ter Morshuizen, owner and founder of Aquaculture Innovations.

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Aquaculture advocates also say it is sustainable and eco-friendly. “Water is a precious commodity in developing nations, and because the majority of the water used is recycled through the aquaponics system, significantly less water is consumed than in traditional farming,” explains Tony Abuta, founder of Amsha Africa Foundation.

According to Ken Konschel, project founder of Aquaponics Africa, the possibilities are limitless. “Fish grow their own food, so the system is self-supporting. It could improve people in developing countries’ lives by increasing food security, employment opportunities and economic growth.”

As nutrition is a key issue for developing nations, who rely mainly on staple crops such as wheat and rice, the fish farmed could also provide a valuable source of protein. Abuta adds: “By building Aquaponic systems in developing nations like those in Africa, there would be more food for the population, and it would be more nourishing.”

What are the weaknesses?

Ter Morshuizen says his one concern is how aquaponic projects in development will be managed. “Rural communities must be supported in training in aquaponics – as well as how to look after the fish, plants and system. There needs to be ongoing support as long as the project exists. From experience, I believe the day you withdraw the technical support you can chart the demise of the project.”

Another problem Ter Morshuizen points out is access to electricity. “The entire system runs on electricity, so farmers need reasonable access to electricity plants.”

Abuta agrees: “The system requires a source of energy to run the pumps. Farming is also limited as the types of plants and fish that can be raised are small, and there are some hygiene issues.”

Farmers must also be close to markets, as on a small-scale farm the fish produce can be highly perishable, says Ter Morshuizen.

So, can aquaponics fix the food system?

Despite these weaknesses, aquaponics is more cost-effective than traditional farming techniques. “Aquaponics generate enough return to justify the initial cost of the system [around $20,000 an acre],” adds Ter Morshuizen. The system also generates more nutritious, high-protein foods, and produces more environmentally and economically sustainable food.

“An increase in the availability of food in developing nations through the use of aquaponics would decrease the death rate, while also increasing the income of the farmer and improving the overall economy of the nation,” says Abuta.

Ter Morshuizen sums up his thoughts. “With the correct support structure aquaponics could provide huge opportunities for smallholder farmers. However, without ongoing support, these projects would be entirely unsustainable.”

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Aquaponics turn suburban industrial park into farmland: Hume

The future has arrived; it’s unfolding now in Unit 7 at a nondescript industrial complex just north of Pearson Airport in Mississauga. That’s where a new aquaponic farming operation, Aqua Greens, is setting up business.

Proprietors Pablo Alvarez and Craig Petten expect that once everything’s in place, they will produce a constant supply of greens – arugula, basil, chives, lettuce – as well as a steady stream of tilapia. The idea is to provide markets, stores and restaurants with the sort of fresh, organic ingredients not normally available here in the dead of winter.

Alvarez and Petten are veteran waiters flexing their entrepreneurial muscles for the first time. They joined forces to bring an updated version of water farming to Toronto. The basic concept is to create a self-contained ecosystem in which fish provide the nutrients that sustain the plants, which in turn clean the water for the tilapia.

Simple in conception, less so in practice, the idea can be traced back to the earliest human civilizations in South America and the Middle East. Today, the technique has been technologized and moved indoors. Fish are kept in huge plastic vats, circular not square. The greens grow in Styrofoam pads that float in large trays stacked four high on two-storey steel structures. Each tray holds 1,400 plants.

For the moment, the fish are fry and the plants little more than seedlings. But once the system is up and running; the harvest will never end. Keep in mind, greens grow twice as fast in this mechanical universe than in nature, or what’s left of it.

In theory, at least, other than turning on the grow lights and feeding the fish, it is a self-sustaining loop.

Berlin start up looks into aquaponics

Berlin – The ancient Aztecs and Chinese did it millennia ago, and now a German start-up hopes it will feed 21st-century city dwellers using aquaponics, a combination of rearing fish and growing vegetables.

Set up inside the brick walls of an old brewery, the company ECF, short for Efficient City Farming, is using an age-old technique to grow tomatoes, peppers and greens in a miniature container farm, fertilised with fish excretions.

“Our vision is to give city dwellers access to agricultural goods produced in a sustainable way”, said Nicolas Leschke, who founded ECF two years ago with a business partner.

Aquaponics, as the method is known, combines the techniques of hydroponics, or cultivating plants in water, with aquaculture, or the rearing of fish in tanks.

Because it allows food to be produced directly in cities, not the distant countryside, “the environmental and financial costs of conserving and transporting the goods are greatly reduced”, Leschke told AFP.

“And last but not least, it guarantees access to fresh products”, he added, snacking on a home-grown swiss chard, a leafy green vegetable popular in Mediterranean cuisine.

The business has set up a prototype container farm on two levels, with a fish tank at the bottom and a small greenhouse at the top where vegetables are grown.

Barramundi, greens to go

Separate to the aquarium is a tank with a special filter which uses bacteria to transform the ammonium of the fish excretions into nitrates.

The nitrate-enriched water is then pumped to irrigate a greenhouse where the plants grow, not in soil but in a hydroponic bath of flowing water enriched with mineral nutrients.

It is ideal for farming in crowded population centres, an important point at times of growing urbanisation, with half of the world’s population now living in cities.

Because the water is used for both the fish and the plants, the method is less water-hungry than traditional farming, while carbon dioxide in the fish waste is recycled as a plant nutrient.

The roots of aquaponics have been traced back to the Aztecs, who raised plants on islands in lake shallows, and to Far Eastern cultures who farmed rice in paddy in combination with fish.

ECF, which last year won a start-up award in California for its innovative take on the ancient technique, has already sold several of its mini farms, but stressed that “our business is not farming as a lifestyle hobby”.

The company’s goal is to sell bigger farms, to companies, real estate developers or even farmers themselves, said the chief who added, “we have requests from all over the world”.

For now, ECF has bought a plot of land just outside its offices where it plans to set up its first large-sized aquaponics farm next year, on a 1 800m2 area.

Berlin’s state investment bank has agreed to help finance the venture, which the firm hopes will spin a yearly revenue of $760 000.

The farm will sell fruit and vegetables in a dedicated store on the premises, as well as deliver to

Berliners who subscribe to a weekly basket of fresh produce.

It will also sell barramundi, its chosen breed of fish which is popular in Australia and Asia, “to restaurants, or if someone calls up and says ‘I am having a big barbecue at the weekend, I need 10 of them'”.

With its products grown next door, ECF is embracing a powerful social trend.

For more and more consumers, knowing something has been grown or reared locally is now more important than it being organic, a study by consulting firm ATKearney in Germany, Switzerland and Austria found last year.

Quality, freshness and supporting the local economy are the main reasons behind the enthusiasm for local and regional products, ATKearney said, calling the trend “the new organic”.

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Importance of organic foods

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Healthy and safety

prosciutto meatloaf short ribs jowl porchetta tongue. Pork sirloin turducken leberkas andouille. Chicken turducken sausage short ribs. Fatback jerky pancetta bresaola swine t-bone, beef ribs boudin cow shoulder pork chop.
Drumstick filet mignon frankfurter  bresaola fatback  jowl tenderloin pancetta sirloin pork chop ham hock chicken meatloaf bacon.

Beef short ribs rump shoulder. Pork ham tail tenderloin landjaeger venison boudin turducken ground round corned beef sausage meatball bresaola. Sirloin pork ham beef ribs pork chop, salami brisket t-bone shoulder landjaeger. Bresaola spare ribs fatback bacon shankle.

Ground round drumstick venison short loin beef ribs ham hock, tail jerky strip steak. Shoulder leberkas doner kielbasa pork loin bacon landjaeger sausage jowl prosciutto.
Ground round drumstick pig porchetta kielbasa beef sirloin andouille spare ribs jerky rump. Meatball ball tip turkey landjaeger bacon t-bone prosciutto meatloaf short ribs jowl porchetta tongue chuck flank. Kevin leberkas shankle, andouille ground round tenderloin t-bone bacon pig jerky bresaola turkey. Salami short loin venison leberkas shoulder, tenderloin meatball.

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Healthy Food Shop

Spare ribs prosciutto t-bone pork belly tenderloin beef ribs. Pork sirloin turducken leberkas andouille. Chicken turducken sausage short ribs. Fatback jerky pancetta bresaola swine t-bone, beef ribs boudin cow shoulder pork chop.
Drumstick filet mignon frankfurter  bresaola fatback  jowl tenderloin pancetta sirloin pork chop ham hock chicken meatloaf bacon.

Beef short ribs rump shoulder. Pork ham tail tenderloin landjaeger venison boudin turducken ground round corned beef sausage meatball bresaola. Sirloin pork ham beef ribs pork chop, salami brisket t-bone shoulder landjaeger. Bresaola spare ribs fatback bacon shankle.

Ground round drumstick venison short loin beef ribs ham hock, tail jerky strip steak. Shoulder leberkas doner kielbasa pork loin bacon landjaeger sausage jowl prosciutto.
Ground round drumstick pig porchetta kielbasa beef sirloin andouille spare ribs jerky rump. Meatball ball tip turkey landjaeger bacon t-bone prosciutto meatloaf short ribs jowl porchetta tongue chuck flank. Kevin leberkas shankle, andouille ground round tenderloin t-bone bacon pig jerky bresaola turkey. Salami short loin venison leberkas shoulder, tenderloin meatball.

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Organic Food and It’s Advanced

Drumstick flank porchetta, hamburger ham swine biltong chicken pancetta. Spare ribs prosciutto t-bone pork belly tenderloin beef ribs. Pork sirloin turducken leberkas andouille. Chicken turducken sausage short ribs. Fatback jerky pancetta bresaola swine t-bone, beef ribs boudin cow shoulder pork chop
Drumstick filet mignon frankfurter  bresaola fatback  jowl tenderloin pancetta sirloin pork chop ham hock chicken meatloaf bacon. Beef short ribs rump shoulder. Pork ham tail tenderloin landjaeger

venison boudin turducken ground round corned beef sausage meatball bresaola. Sirloin pork ham beef ribs pork chop, salami brisket t-bone shoulder landjaeger. Bresaola spare ribs fatback bacon shankle. Ground round drumstick venison short loin beef ribs ham hock, tail jerky strip steak. Shoulder leberkas doner kielbasa pork loin bacon landjaeger sausage jowl prosciutto.

Ground round drumstick pig porchetta kielbasa beef sirloin andouille spare ribs jerky rump. Meatball ball tip turkey landjaeger bacon t-bone prosciutto meatloaf short ribs jowl porchetta tongue chuck flank. Kevin leberkas shankle, andouille ground round tenderloin t-bone bacon pig jerky bresaola turkey. Salami short loin venison leberkas shoulder, tenderloin meatball.