B.C. vertical farming company says it could produce up to 6 million bags of salad greens a year - Action News
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British Columbia

B.C. vertical farming company says it could produce up to 6 million bags of salad greens a year

UP Vertical Farms is growing leafy greens on shelves stacked atop one another on a piece of land a fraction of the size needed for traditional farming.

B.C.s first hands-free vertical farm launches in Pitt Meadows

Two smiling men in white coveralls hold up green products in a warehouse featuring large trays of seeds.
Shahram and Bahram Rashti, co-founders of UP Vertical Farms. (UP Vertical Farms/Oppy)

A newly launched vertical farming enterprise in Pitt Meadows, B.C., is hoping to ease food security in the province, as it offers locally grown, environmentally sustainable produce.

The operation, called UP Vertical Farms, is growing baby leafy greens vertically on shelves stacked atop one another, on a piece of land a fraction of the size needed for traditional farming. According to a news release, the company says it could produce 6.3 million bags of greens per year, which would be sold in grocery stores throughout Western Canada.

"As most people have noticed, our lettuce supply from California's been really hit and miss," said Lenore Newman, the director of the Food and Agriculture Institute at the University of the Fraser Valley.

"It's either been very expensive, or we've had supply chain disruption. We've had poor quality. This idea of producing lettuce locally the time has come."

WATCH | Take a virtual tour of B.C.'s first hands-free vertical farming operation:

Visit B.C.'s first hands-free vertical farming operation

1 year ago
Duration 2:14
UP Vertical Farms was born out of a desire to mitigate the effects of climate change, says co-owner Bahram Rashti.

Bahram Rashti and his brother Shahram have been working on the project for nearly a decade but are just at a point where they're able to start supplying grocery stores with locally-grown produce.

"We always knew there was an issue with the adverse effects of climate change," Rashti said.

"The more we looked into it, we realized that there's something that we could do to help out, especially for Canada, because a lot of our produce in Canada is imported."

Production 350 times higher

Rashti estimates their production could be up to 350 times higher than that of traditional lettuce farming.

Mark Lefsrud, anassociate professor of bioresource engineering at McGill University, says it takes 60 to 90 days to grow leafy greens outdoors on traditional fields. By growing indoors, he said that can be shortened. UPsays it takes13 to 21 days for its products to grow.

Shelves lit up under purple lights.
Shelf upon shelf of leafy greens growing at a hands-free vertical farm in Pitt Meadows, B.C. (Nicholas Allan/CBC)

While 350 times greater yieldseems ambitious, Lefsrudsays it is theoretically possible.

"NASA has been able to show you can get that high," he said."I haven't seen a commercial company that's pulled it off. Most of the time, we say 30 [times], if you're really good, maybe 60 to 80, but 300 times, that's a bit of a stretch."

Lefsrud, who has worked with NASA in the past, says there is "huge potential" for vertical farms. Like Newman, he said the increasing cost of lettuce is causeenough for people to look for new ways to grow leafy greens.

'Hands-free' facility

UP Vertical Farms is one of the first hands-free vertical farming operations in Canada. It is fully automated and uses touchless technology for everythingfrom seeding to harvest.

The greens are grown indoors, without the use of pesticides, herbicides and fungicides, manure or genetic modification.

Because of all these measures, the end product is ready to eatright out of the bag, the company says.

Rashti saidthe facility uses 99 per cent less agricultural land, 99 per cent less freshwater and 99 per cent less fertilizer than traditional farming practices.

"It's good food for the people and the planet."

A man stands in front of dozens of shelves that are lit up purple because of LED lights
Bahram Rashti, the CEO of UP Vertical Farms, said his business came out of a desire to help manage the effects of climate change. (Nicholas Allan/CBC)

Newman said that with innovative businesses like this, the quality of produce in B.C. grocery stores will go up.

"[With vertical farming], we'regetting product the same day as picked or a day later, whereas when it's coming from California, it's eight or 10days old before it even lands in our shopping cart."

"Be ready for much better leafy greens than we've ever been used to. And that's a good thing because maybe we can all eat a little more salad."

Corrections

  • A previous version of the story indicated that UP Vertical Farms products take 13 to 31 days to grow. In fact, the growing cycle is 13 to 21 days.
    Apr 04, 2023 4:20 PM PT

With files from Jennifer Magher