Farms: Urban Barns | Farming of the future
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Urban Barns Foods says it's the future of agriculture. The company is growing food indoors, with an emphasis on efficiency and volume. »»» Subscribe to The National to watch more videos here: https://www.youtube.com/user/CBCTheNational?sub_confirmation=1 Voice Your Opinion & Connect With Us Online: The National Updates on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/thenational The National Updates on Twitter: https://twitter.com/CBCTheNational The National Updates on Google+: https://plus.google.com/+CBCTheNational »»» »»» »»» »»» »»» The National is CBC Television's flagship news program. Airing seven days a week, the show delivers news, feature documentaries and analysis from some of Canada's leading journalists.
Comments
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cant wait whole foods is partnering up with urban barns they are already selling produce in the whole foods in Montreal
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What's lurking in your lettuce?
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Of course, Canada and other countries will show the U.S. the way! The U.S. is too tied up with Monsanto, GMO foods, and big corporation control over our food supply.
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Are the nutritional contents on par with the plants produced by our current methods?
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Stupid fkn monkeys - lettuce is NOT food. ... Eh!
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How is the nutrition compared to organically or "traditionally" grown?
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This is the future, and not a moment too soon.
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Brilliant and necessary- securing a livable future !
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The only issue may be the genetic diversity if the plants... If they are all the same, they are at greater risk of disease wiping it all out
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There is no such thing as GMO lettuce. This is just making people fear their food for no good reason. Poor irresponsibly produced video.
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We need to split up the city into small groups.... grow for ourselves
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And then the chef puts unsustainable, polluting, resource depleting chicken breast on the salad.
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Amazing.
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Do they have to be non-GMO? Why limit it's potential that way?
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So what kind of waste does it produce and what are the power requirements? Also is it cheaper than current agricultural practices and can it be used to grow things like potatoes, apples, cannola or wheat? So far you have only shown it growing products for a salad.