Indoor farming uses less water and land. So what’s causing some companies to fail?

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Growing indoors, like at Eden Green Technology in Cleburne, also protects crops from increasingly extreme weather. But skeptics question the cost of keeping...

Eden Green Technology CEO Eddy Badrina says his company's greenhouses rely mostly on natural light for their plants.Indoor farming brings growing inside in what experts sometimes call “controlled environment agriculture.” There are different methods; vertical farming involves stacking produce from floor to ceiling, often under artificial lights and with the plants growing in nutrient-enriched water.

Tom Kimmerer, a plant physiologist who taught at the University of Kentucky, has tracked indoor farming alongside his research into the growth of plants both outdoors and inside. He said his first thought on vertical farm startups – especially those heavily reliant on artificial light – was, “Boy, this is a dumb idea” – mainly due to high energy costs.The industry has acknowledged those high costs.

He thinks investment flowing toward new versions of indoor farming would be better spent on practical solutions for outdoor farmers like weed-zapping robots, or even climate solutions like subsidizing farmers to adopt regenerative practices. Indoor farming companies counter this by emphasizing high hygiene; for example, Eden Green touts “laboratory conditions” on its website and says workers closely monitor their greenhouses to immediately catch any pests. They also say vertical farms actually need fewer pesticides than outdoor farms do, reducing environmental impacts.

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