4.7 Article

Comparative environmental footprints of lettuce supplied by hydroponic controlled-environment agriculture and field-based supply chains

Journal

JOURNAL OF CLEANER PRODUCTION
Volume 369, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.jclepro.2022.133214

Keywords

Water stress; Vertical farming; Food miles; Carbon footprint; Supply chain; Urban agriculture

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Attributional life cycle assessment was used to analyze the environmental footprints of lettuce produced in different supply chain configurations. The results showed that hydroponic closed-environment agriculture (CEA) systems have larger environmental footprints due to significant electricity consumption, but they can achieve higher yields. By using renewable energy sources and optimizing land use, the carbon footprint of CEA systems can be reduced. Additionally, CEA systems use less water compared to field-based supply chains and can help mitigate water stress and soil degradation in arid regions. While CEA has potential environmental hotspots, it can play a role in sustainable food system transformation when implemented carefully and in suitable contexts.
Attributional life cycle assessment was applied to determine environmental footprints of lettuce produced across ten supply chain configurations, based on either hydroponic closed-environment agriculture (CEA) with six different electricity sources, or field supply chains involving regional, continental or inter-continental transport. Hydroponic CEA systems use circa 15 kWh of electricity for lighting, cooling, ventilation and pumping per kg of lettuce supplied. Based on typical current national grid electricity generation mixes with significant fossil fuel dependence, this results in large environmental footprints, e.g. up to 17.8 kg CO2 eq. and 33 g N eq. per kg lettuce ??? compared with 10 kg CO2 eq. and 16 g N eq. per kg lettuce air-freighted across continents. However, hydro-ponic CEA can produce orders of magnitude more produce per m2.yr and can be integrated into existing buildings (e.g. on roof tops, in basements and disused warehouses, etc). Factoring in the carbon opportunity costs of land use, and meeting electricity requirements exclusively through renewable generation, could result in closed hy-droponic CEA delivering produce with a smaller carbon footprint than most field-based supply chains, at 0.48 kg CO2 eq. per kg lettuce. However, this would only be the case where renewable electricity originates from genuinely additional capacity, and where a land use policy or other mechanisms ensure that modest areas of land spared from horticultural production are used for ???nature based solutions??? such as afforestation. Hydroponic CEA uses orders of magnitude less direct water than field-based systems, and could help to mitigate water stress and associated soil degradation in arid and semi-arid regions used for horticulture ??? so long as upstream water stress associated with electricity generation is mitigated. CEA could be one of the least sustainable forms of food production if poorly implemented, and has numerous environmental hotspots. But with careful design and scaling, in appropriate contexts of high demand and low agro-climatic potential for production of horticultural produce, CEA deployment could play a role in sustainable food system transformation, potentially helping to reconnect consumers with (urban) producers. There may be opportunities to link building air handling systems with rooftop or basement CEA requiring inputs of cooling, CO2 and water. Superscript/Subscript Available

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