Hydroponic Farming to Feed America | Farms Across America

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  • เผยแพร่เมื่อ 15 ก.ค. 2024
  • Houston’s hydroponic farming efforts can help feed America amidst population growth, declining soil health, record droughts, and supply chain issues. Join us at Moonflower Farms to watch how hyperlocal vertical farming at scale is leading food innovation.
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    Moonflower Farms founder, Federico Marques, first learned about hydroponics while working with NASA and Bioregenerative Life Support Systems staff at Stennis Space Center and he’s been on a quest ever since. In 2016, he launched the city of Houston's first commercial vertical hydroponic farm and by 2019, they’d moved into a 20,000 square foot greenhouse. When grocery shelves emptied and transportation ground to a halt after the 2021 Texas winter storm, Moonflower Farms managed to keep growing fresh food to feed Houston and beyond. That’s the ultimate food security.
    It all comes down to a simple science, as old as the age of Babylon and as far reaching as the moon. With nutrient film technique, or NFT, plants take root in water instead of soil, surrounded by a film of nutrients that the farmer controls for optimal growth. Instead of saturating miles of depleted topsoil with what accounts for 70% of our global potable water, hydroponic farmers are able to give the plants exactly what they need, no more and no less. This means hydroponic farming uses 95% less water than traditional farming, while avoiding soil borne diseases and the need for wide expanses of land.
    And since hydroponic farming can be done virtually anywhere, including outer space, that means hyperlocal access to food, something Americans desperately need in a time of supply chain interruptions, skyrocketing fuel prices, and decarbonization. Much of the food we get at the grocery store has traveled days if not weeks, over thousands of miles, to reach us. Considering a head of lettuce loses 10% of its nutrients every day it gets further away from harvest, we're looking at lower nutrition food at best, and at worst, food that ends up in the landfill. In fact, 66% of the fresh produce we import goes to waste.
    As Moonflower CEO Federico Marques says, “Our current food systems are vastly inefficient, with food waste, rampant pesticide use, transport emissions, and agricultural runoff. Closed loop grow systems prevent these problems and help to create higher quality food and local jobs.”
    Moonflower Farms believes that by 2030, every city will be developing their own hyperlocal sustainable hydroponic farms. They’re taking it to Kroger stores in the greater Houston area, to their climate tech incubator, Greentown Labs, and to schools across Texas. And they want to help us do it. From here to the moon.
    EPISODE HIGHLIGHTS
    00:00 Houston Texas’ biggest hydroponic farm
    00:18 Growing food without soil
    00:47 NASA researches growing food in space
    01:23 10th grader brings hydroponics to Houston schools
    02:55 How hydroponics helps food security
    03:53 Greentown Labs helps startups like Moonflower Farms
    04:25 Different types of hydroponics
    04:55 Hydroponics uses 95% less water than traditional ag
    05:25 NFT, nutrient film technique
    06:50 Hyperlocal means fresh food for everyone
    07:08 AI farming
    07:46 Failure is part of innovation
    07:59 Sustainable city farming solves food insecurity
    Directed by Jessie English
    Created by Conor Gaughan and Kate Tucker
    Written and hosted by Kate Tucker
    Produced by Consensus Digital Media in partnership with Remedial Media
    Executive Producer - Kate Tucker
    Executive Producer - Jessie English
    Executive Producer - Eric Feigenbaum
    Executive Producer - Conor Gaughan
    Featuring:
    Federico Marques - Founder & CEO, Moonflower Farms
    Luis Silva - Lead Engineer, Moonflower Farms
    Jose Garcia - Operations Manager, Moonflower Farms
    Rahul Vijayan - Founder, Farm to Tray
    Filmed at Moonflower Farms and Greentown Labs in Houston, Texas
    Supervising Producer - Geoff Rock
    Editor - Nick Nazmi
    Assistant Editor - Dustin Waldman
    Director of Photography - Isaac Rosenthal
    Camera Operator - Eddie Bernard
    Gaffer / Drone Operator - Fletcher Anstis
    Sound Engineer - Tom Eichler
    Production Coordinator - John Ryan Gage
    Production Assistant - Josiah Shaw
    Makeup & Hair - Tracy Fettig
    Wardrobe - Hollie Van Osenbruggen
    Audio Mixer / Sound Design - Dillon Terry
    Color Grading - Ind3x
    Motion Graphics - Yuriy Netrebyuk
    Graphic Design - Stephen Lepsch
    Music by Desert Dive, Dario Benedetti, Falls, Shimmer, Joshua Spacht, and Heartland Nights, courtesy of Soundstripe
    Special thanks to Greentown Labs Houston, and to NASA Stennis Space Center: • NASA's Second Hot Fire...
    More stories from Consensus:
    thebusinessdownload.com/
    garden-and-health.com/
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ความคิดเห็น • 32

  • @traceyjohnson2857
    @traceyjohnson2857 ปีที่แล้ว +3

    I love the use of hydroponics to battle food insecurity. Great video!

  • @MichaelVanecekAuthor
    @MichaelVanecekAuthor ปีที่แล้ว +2

    Have been exploring hydroponics here in central TX. Got a little Cropking NFT setup I am assembling, plus dutch-buckets going together - with hopes to not just grow larger veggies like tomatoes, but also chocolate, avocado, and coffee trees hydroponically. Also have mesh-tubes for vanilla orchids. All still in the very early stages. But indoors, under LED grow-lights, with complete environmental control. Inspiration was the Texas Freeze a couple years ago that wiped out my greenhouse.

  • @karimarques9995
    @karimarques9995 ปีที่แล้ว +4

    Love this video!

    • @ConsensusDigitalMedia
      @ConsensusDigitalMedia  ปีที่แล้ว +1

      So glad!

    • @onyemaechiobi4024
      @onyemaechiobi4024 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@ConsensusDigitalMedia please can you teach me how to learn this system of farming?
      Am very much interested to lean
      How do I do reach you?

  • @AkSonya1010
    @AkSonya1010 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Beautiful, I love seeing hydroponics get bigger
    I have a small setup for myself at home.
    What I don't understand about thier setup, they aren't doing vertical farming. They could grow so much more vertically.

  • @quotes6687
    @quotes6687 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    I would like to visit as a volunteer learner

  • @jeffersfelix5454
    @jeffersfelix5454 ปีที่แล้ว

    Thanks 👍 for glorious divine applicable ideas. I live in a mountainous island. Lots of indiscriminate farming... Lots of soil erosion. Lots of hillside farming can be curtailed... Global concepts for life... Population stabilization..

  • @obeserodent26
    @obeserodent26 9 หลายเดือนก่อน

    this is pretty sick bruh

  • @SweetUncleG
    @SweetUncleG ปีที่แล้ว +2

    How much to make a single infrastructure like that...? Is it affordable...?

    • @Dwade689
      @Dwade689 10 หลายเดือนก่อน

      About 300k

  • @sailr
    @sailr หลายเดือนก่อน

    Imagine a school system with its own hydroponic farm to produce the food needed in all of its schools cafeterias, etc! Good investment? Maybe the U.S. Govt could jump onboard by providing grants to build the farms? Worth thinking about.

  • @opheliagreer3163
    @opheliagreer3163 ปีที่แล้ว

    hi I would love toget involved and start my own farm for NY family and more

    • @Floreypottery
      @Floreypottery ปีที่แล้ว

      Same here we already started a small indoor vertical farm and want to go bigger eventually along with maybe growing edible flowered and a mushroom grow house maybe one day

  • @onyemaechiobi4024
    @onyemaechiobi4024 ปีที่แล้ว

    HOW Do I BECOME AN HYDROPONICS FARMER??
    AM VERY MUCH INTERESTED TO LEARN FROM YOU GUYS..

  • @barrymcdonald9868
    @barrymcdonald9868 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    build soil not pipes for sustainable outcomes, even the indoor pot growers have moved to soil and away from Hydro, it's about the soil life

  • @giveitagowithdave1970
    @giveitagowithdave1970 ปีที่แล้ว

    How can i start hydroponic mini farm in the Northern Georgia. Thank you

    • @Dwade689
      @Dwade689 10 หลายเดือนก่อน

      💵💵💵💵💵

  • @kesterbelgrove818
    @kesterbelgrove818 ปีที่แล้ว

    Fully love this video and the hydroponics movement as a whole. 5% water, 30% fertilizer, less space and less labour, no or substantially reduces pesticides as compared to a traditional farm. I'm a huge fan of hydroponics.

  • @tincan397
    @tincan397 ปีที่แล้ว

    Can you grow wheat, oats or potatoes yet? I don’t want to try to live on lettuce and spinach!

  • @MrRiverGrove
    @MrRiverGrove ปีที่แล้ว

    Dudes are the first people to grow hydroponically 😂

  • @hydrogreen1111
    @hydrogreen1111 ปีที่แล้ว

    How much lettuce are we supposed to eat?

  • @jamesalan206
    @jamesalan206 ปีที่แล้ว

    And when they ban the fertilizers that you require to grow because they aren't sustainable your screwed

  • @franzb69
    @franzb69 ปีที่แล้ว +4

    hydroponic nutrients aren't very sustainable. they're all petrol based. chemical based.

    • @torh1
      @torh1 ปีที่แล้ว

      Maybe they should consider using aquaponic method.

    • @Floreypottery
      @Floreypottery ปีที่แล้ว +1

      Aquaponic has downfalls too ones a chemical buildup from fish poo

    • @Floreypottery
      @Floreypottery ปีที่แล้ว

      Some not all theirs a big push for fertilizers from plants which is sustainable and could be abundant if people grow these plants

  • @bheshman2310
    @bheshman2310 ปีที่แล้ว

    I don't want this future