High-tech glasshouse cuts agricultural energy use
High-tech glasshouse cuts agricultural energy use

The high-tech facility is designed to be as low energy as possible by using different techniques to traditional glasshouses.
Cooled air is piped in from the sides, instead of opening roof vents which wastes energy and carbon dioxide. Roof vents are occasionally opened to release air pressure and humidity, with levels monitored by an advanced computer system.
The glasshouse is heated by natural gas boilers, with hot water running through 62km of pipe on the ground which doubles as a rail track for trolleys used by workers tending plants. A computer monitors when plants need to be watered by weighing their growbags to see how much water they have used and by monitoring the amount of light, from UV lights and sunlight.
The £15m glasshouse is expected to produce more than 150 million tomatoes a year and maintain its temperature at 26°C, an “ideal temperature to maximise on the growth of the plant”, according to Richard Lewis horticultural director of Sterling Suffolk.
A quarter of a million plants were put inside that facility at Bramford, near Ipswich. 10 weeks on, the first baby cherry tomatoes are ready for picking.
The plants grow around a foot per week, will reach around 15m in length, and were imported from the Netherlands as two-month-old saplings. Each plant should produce one truss of tomatoes per week, with workers cutting trusses of 12 tomatoes to ripen on the vine.
They are planted in a natural fibre extracted from coconut husk, instead of soil, and are irrigated with rainwater collected from the roof in a 61 million-litre reservoir.
“Part of the ethos of this nursery was ecology,” said Lewis. “The land that we’re on was very low agricultural land, it was poorly producing, not great soil. What we’ve done is taken that and built a high-tech glasshouse on it and moved it to being very intensive and very, very productive.”
Bumble bees pollinate the plants, with 60 cardboard box hives and 9,000 bees in the glasshouse. Few can be seen at ground level as they focus on the flowers.
The current human workforce of 32 could increase to 150 by the third phase of the project, which would see the site expand from 5.6 to 17 hectares of glasshouse.
The project was funded by individual investors, with the lowest investment at £100 and the highest at £1.5m.
Lewis said it is too early to know the impact of Brexit, but has stocked up on fertilisers in case of transport delays.
A study last year found that crop failures could rise significantly in the future due to rising insect populations made possible because of global warming.

The high-tech facility is designed to be as low energy as possible by using different techniques to traditional glasshouses.
Cooled air is piped in from the sides, instead of opening roof vents which wastes energy and carbon dioxide. Roof vents are occasionally opened to release air pressure and humidity, with levels monitored by an advanced computer system.
The glasshouse is heated by natural gas boilers, with hot water running through 62km of pipe on the ground which doubles as a rail track for trolleys used by workers tending plants. A computer monitors when plants need to be watered by weighing their growbags to see how much water they have used and by monitoring the amount of light, from UV lights and sunlight.
The £15m glasshouse is expected to produce more than 150 million tomatoes a year and maintain its temperature at 26°C, an “ideal temperature to maximise on the growth of the plant”, according to Richard Lewis horticultural director of Sterling Suffolk.
A quarter of a million plants were put inside that facility at Bramford, near Ipswich. 10 weeks on, the first baby cherry tomatoes are ready for picking.
The plants grow around a foot per week, will reach around 15m in length, and were imported from the Netherlands as two-month-old saplings. Each plant should produce one truss of tomatoes per week, with workers cutting trusses of 12 tomatoes to ripen on the vine.
They are planted in a natural fibre extracted from coconut husk, instead of soil, and are irrigated with rainwater collected from the roof in a 61 million-litre reservoir.
“Part of the ethos of this nursery was ecology,” said Lewis. “The land that we’re on was very low agricultural land, it was poorly producing, not great soil. What we’ve done is taken that and built a high-tech glasshouse on it and moved it to being very intensive and very, very productive.”
Bumble bees pollinate the plants, with 60 cardboard box hives and 9,000 bees in the glasshouse. Few can be seen at ground level as they focus on the flowers.
The current human workforce of 32 could increase to 150 by the third phase of the project, which would see the site expand from 5.6 to 17 hectares of glasshouse.
The project was funded by individual investors, with the lowest investment at £100 and the highest at £1.5m.
Lewis said it is too early to know the impact of Brexit, but has stocked up on fertilisers in case of transport delays.
A study last year found that crop failures could rise significantly in the future due to rising insect populations made possible because of global warming.
Jack Loughranhttps://eandt.theiet.org/rss
https://eandt.theiet.org/content/articles/2019/02/high-tech-glasshouse-cuts-agricultural-energy-use/
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