Posts Tagged garden
Vertical Agriculture On The Up
Over the next 40 years the UN predicts a global population boom, leading to agricultural land shortages. Great Stuff Hydroponics thinks we can overcome this problem and help to reduce the environmental impact of our cities by building vertical hydroponic agricultural buildings in urban centres.
Supplying food in the West is not an issue, where agricultural land is available and complex distribution systems are already set up. However, the UN predicts that by the year 2050, there will be an additional 3 billion people on this planet, approximately 80% of whom will live in urban centres. This poses a problem, particularly in developed societies where farmers are a dying breed and food often has to be transported over vast distances before it ends up on peoples’ dinner tables.
Currently, some cities are greener than others; Singapore, Hanoi and Havana have all been cited as food producing cities. Whilst they are not yet self sufficient, other cities still have very far to go. New York, for example, has to import nearly every morsel of food which is consumed there, and trucking all that food into the city every day takes its toll on the environment and is an incredibly inefficient use of resources in a sophisticated society.
Tags: agricultur, agricultural, agriculture, biology, chemical pesticide, chemical pesticides, compost, crops, farming, farms, fertilizer, fertilizers, garden, hydroponic, hydroponic kits, hydroponic light, hydroponic system, hydroponics, pesticide, pesticides, pests, plants, scientists, species, sustainable, sustainable building, the environment, vertical farm, vertical farm project, vertical farmsRelated posts
Using Crushed Limestone in Agriculture
Let us talk about organic fertilizers. They have been used by farmers for too many years; however, not a lot of people get to realize their negative effects on the soil. When they are overused, they can be extremely dangerous to plants and even in microorganisms that tend to add more nourishment. Fortunately, a new method of agriculture is being introduced, and it is with the use of crushed limestone. What’s more, agricultural lime seems to hold more benefits than organic fertilizers.
The Benefits of Crushed Limestone
An agricultural lime is commonly called pellet. From a huge stone, it has been pulverized to resemble more like a powder. For those who do not know yet the many possible benefits of crushed limestone, it is time for you to get a very good idea of its many blessings:
Tags: agricultur, agricultural, agricultural lime, agricultural product, agricultural products, agriculture, calcium, crops, crushed limestone, fertilizer, fertilizers, food crops, garden, limestone, organic, organic fertilizer, organic fertilizers, organisms, plants, soil erosionRelated posts