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Singapore has one of the highest population densities on the planet.
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More than five million people crowd into this small wealthy island city.
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Land here comes at a premium, forcing people to expand up rather than out.
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And it's not just office towers and apartment complexes that are reaching skyward.
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Singapore now has one of the world's first commercial vertical farms. It's called SkyGreens.
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This is the framework. This is a greenhouse. 50 year old entrepreneur, Jack Ng, an engineer by training, is the farm's owner and designer.
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Translucent structures, nearly four stories tall line the property.
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On the inside automated towers of vegetables rotate like Ferris wheels in slow motion between a nutrient-infused bath below and the sun above.
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Ng says each tower is powered by a gravity-fed water wheel.
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It's an ancient technology with a modern twist.
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Ng says one of the biggest benefits of this closed loop, hydraulic system is how little energy it consumes.
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Electricity we use in Singapore it's three dollars per month for this whole tower.
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That's three dollars a month to run this entire tower... or about the same amount of electricity used in single 60-watt lightbulb.
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You can try the lettuce. OK it's fresh.
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Eating local, freshly picked greens is a luxury in Singapore.
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With just 250 acres of farmland left, the city grows only seven percent of the produce it consumes.
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That may be an extreme case, but it represents a looming problem facing cities all over the world, says Columbia University ecologist, Dickson Despommier.
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We're going to reach a tipping point very soon where traditional agriculture can no longer supply enough food for the people living on the planet.
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He says producing enough food for the three and a half billion people living in cities today requires an amount of land twice the size of South America.
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That would be ok if we could stabilize our population at 7 billion. But that's not going to happen.
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Despommier believes that 80 percent of the world's population will be living in cities by 2050... making today's challenges seem trivial by comparison.
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The question arises, can we supply enough food for everybody on the planet including a growing urban population.
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And I think we can. And I think we can do it by empowering people in the cities to grow food right there.
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SkyGreens' vertical farm offers one example of how that may be possible, not just technically but also economically.
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The system is ten times more productive per square foot than conventional farming.
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It also takes a lot less water, labor and chemical inputs.
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Singapore is currently looking very much into urban production.
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Doctor Lee Sing Kong directs Singapore's National Institute of Education.
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I think eventually urban factories for vegetable production would take place in place of electronic factories in Singapore.
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But Lee says visit any Singapore restaurant and you can see just how far the country is from being self-sufficient.
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If you look at the plate of food on the table, say vegetables, it could come from China.
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It could come from the neighboring countries of Indonesia or Malaysia.
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Or it could come in terms of salad greens, as far off as the US and the European countries like Holland.
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Maintaining that supply of food from so many foreign sources is a monumental task.
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Every night hundreds of trucks enter Singapore from Malaysia and beyond, unloading their cargo of fruit and vegetables at this central wholesale market.
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From here the food is loaded onto smaller trucks and delivered throughout the city before sunrise.
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More than 90 percent of the food in Singapore's grocery stores like this one comes from foreign countries.
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That makes local, urban produce like SkyGreens a premium novelty for customers.
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But to some it's much more than that. It's an insurance policy.
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Supermarkets buy food from dozens of other countries as a defense against climate-related disruptions in the global food chain.
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But the National Institute of Education's Lee Sing Kong, says that even that may not be enough to guarantee a steady food supply in the future.
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We do anticipate the need for our own production to a certain level of self-sufficiency.
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I think the government has set a target -- initial target of 10% to 20% of our need and if we can achieve that I think there will be a great feat.
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Singapore recently invested 20 million dollars in a fund to boost domestic food production through new farming technologies like SkyGreens.
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But Lee says incentives alone aren't ENOUGH.
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First, he says, high rise farming needs to be cost competitive.
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Whatever we produce in Singapore must compete with the prices of vegetables coming in Singapore.
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So that's why the government in Singapore is now encouraging and emphasizing models of urban farming that can really not just increase productivity but also lowering cost of production.
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Skygreens owner Jack Ng says he's confident he can compete.
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Three years into his experiment, he says his operating costs are only a quarter of what it would cost to run a conventional farm.
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And since he's local, his transportation costs are also minimal, making his fresh lettuce and Chinese cabbage price-competitive with mass-produced, cheap imports.
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But most importantly, Ng says they taste better.
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He says the "same day" freshness of his greens is a real selling point.
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My customer keep on asking us, can you produce more, can you supply more?
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Ng has raised 28 million dollars in public and private money to more than quadruple his capacity over the next year and a half.
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And in fast rising Singapore, that seems like a smart investment.