My local paper recently carried a similar story, though it sounds like a vertical farm in Surrey may actually be a possibility rather than an idea rattling around the head of some grad student like it is here in Portland.
No yards needed in high-rise farms
It’d be an interesting experiment,
if it's built using private money. Sounds like they’d be fairly resource intensive (lots of electricity, lots of water, imported substrate that’s probably made from unsustainable materials like peat, etc.). The only thing they’d really save on is distribution. They’d almost certainly have to produce high value crops and market to high-end restaurants to make it pan out financially, unless of course municipalities subsidized them.
In terms of public financing, I'd much rather see more resources allocated to community gardens. The City of Portland
had a chance to significantly increase our community garden program recently, but chose not to, despite having 1000 people on the waiting list, with only 1200 plots available. It was a piddling expense, too (~$200,000). There’s plenty of land available to easily expand the program, but the City Council can’t be bothered. The mayor is a useless sack of shiite, a low-rent, hyperliberal version of George W.
I managed to get a community garden plot last year, and I’m glad to have it, but it’s tiny (~500 square feet) and is several miles from where I live. I know the head of the community garden program and she has to regularly fight to keep the program alive. All sorts of lip service given to sustainability here in Portland, but seems like if it doesn't involve light rail or other big construction projects, TPTB don't want to hear about it.
I really like the mayor of Delta's idea (from your article):
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'D')elta Mayor Lois Jackson said vertical farms would be a "good experiment," but she'd prefer to see municipalities buy farmland and lease it to farmers instead. "If we believe we're going to try and feed ourselves we [need] to look at doing that."
If the City of Portland was leasing farmland, I’d sign up right now. And I’m sure hundreds others would, too. It’d be an excellent way to train a new generation of farmers. There are certainly plenty of folk in this town who have an interest in urban agriculture.
But I can’t help but feel all this talk of urban agriculture and urban sustainability is irrelevant if we continue to let our population expand the way it has been. I lived in Vancouver for a year, and I doubt very much the Fraser Valley produces enough to feed the megalopolis. Adding another million Hong Kongers in the next 20 years ain't gonna help. My metro area is also slated to accumulate another million or so people in the next couple decades. Insane.