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IELTS Reading · 8

Growing Up: The Rise of Vertical Farming

Vertical farming is the practice of growing crops in stacked layers, often within controlled indoor environments such as repurposed warehouses, shipping containers, or purpose-built towers. Unlike traditional agriculture, which spreads horizontally across vast fields, vertical farms maximise output per square metre by building upwards. The concept gained popular attention in the early 2000s, when academics began promoting it as a possible answer to the pressures of feeding a rapidly urbanising global population.

The central appeal of vertical farming lies in its independence from weather and soil quality. Crops are typically grown using hydroponics, in which plant roots are bathed in nutrient-rich water, or aeroponics, where roots are misted with a nutrient solution. Because these systems are sealed off from the outside world, growers can fine-tune temperature, humidity, and light to suit each crop. LED lighting, calibrated to emit the specific wavelengths plants need for photosynthesis, replaces sunlight entirely in many facilities. This level of control allows for year-round production regardless of season, and yields can be considerably higher than those of conventional fields.

Environmental advantages are frequently cited by supporters. Vertical farms can use up to 95 per cent less water than open-field cultivation, because water is recirculated rather than lost to evaporation or drainage. Locating farms inside cities also cuts the distance produce must travel to reach consumers, reducing transport emissions and ensuring fresher food. Furthermore, the enclosed setting greatly limits the need for pesticides, since pests struggle to reach the crops.

Nevertheless, the model faces serious obstacles. The most significant is energy consumption: artificial lighting and climate control demand enormous amounts of electricity, and unless this power comes from renewable sources, the carbon savings from reduced transport may be cancelled out. Start-up costs are also high, and many early ventures have collapsed financially. Critics point out that vertical farms currently suit only a narrow range of crops, mainly leafy greens and herbs, rather than the staple grains that feed most of humanity. Whether the technology can scale up to meaningfully address global food security therefore remains an open and hotly debated question.

Questions 1–8

Answer the questions below based on the passage. For Questions 1–4, choose TRUE, FALSE, or NOT GIVEN. For Questions 5–6, choose the correct letter A, B, C, or D. For Questions 7–8, complete the sentences with ONE word from the passage.
  1. Vertical farming spreads crops horizontally across large fields.

  2. The concept of vertical farming attracted public interest in the early 2000s.

  3. Aeroponic systems produce higher yields than hydroponic systems.

  4. Vertical farms can reduce water use significantly compared with open-field cultivation.

  5. According to the passage, why does LED lighting matter in many vertical farms?

  6. What does the passage identify as the most significant obstacle facing vertical farming?

  7. Because the growing environment is sealed off, vertical farms greatly limit the need for ________.

  8. Critics note that vertical farms are currently suited mainly to leafy greens and ________, rather than staple grains.

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