This Tech Is About to Change The World Forever!

Ғылым және технология

Food Science: Check out amazing things Cult Foods Is Working on! www.cultfoodscience.com/
Farming changed the world, we used to all spend our days trying to find enough food to survive. Then came farming, and people became musicians and writers, and well modern civilization. But growing food comes with its fair share of challenges, and feeding the next billion people, isn't automatic. Today I wanted to share 4 ways engineering and food science, is hard at work to solve these problems. Let's figure this out together!
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Chapters
0:00 - Introduction
0:58 - AI Weed Killing Robots
4:09 - Cultured & Cultivated Foods
7:38 - Agrivoltaics
10:59 - Vertical Farming
This KZread video was conducted on behalf of Cult Food Science Corp. (CULT:CSE | CULTF:OTC) and was funded by Outside The Box Capital Inc. and/or affiliates after Two Bit Da Vinci Inc. was engaged by Outside The Box Capital Inc. to advertise for Cult Food Science Corp. (CULT:CSE | CULTF:OTC).
For our full disclaimer, please visit:
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what we'll cover
two bit da vinci,robot farming,weed killing robots,ai farming laser,ai farming weed killer,ai farming robot laser,ai farming weeds,cult foods,cult food science,agrivoltaics,agrivoltaics farming system,agrivoltaic farming,agrivoltaics solar panels,agrivoltaics explained,vertical farming technology,future of food,solving world hunger,feeding the world,food science,food technology,farming breakthroughs,farming technology,vertical farming, This Tech Is About to Change The World Forever!

Пікірлер: 620

  • @TwoBitDaVinci
    @TwoBitDaVinci9 ай бұрын

    Check out amazing things Cult Foods Is Working on! www.cultfoodscience.com/ ( CULT:CSE | CULTF:OTC )

  • @Robyn-Hood

    @Robyn-Hood

    9 ай бұрын

    Please tell us why Bill Gates owns more than half of the farm land in the USA??

  • @kerryb2689

    @kerryb2689

    9 ай бұрын

    First you say 'thanks to all the farmers', then you promote FAKE food???? Sounds anti-farmer to me. Then you want them to farm around solar panels....... You need to spend some TIME Working on a Farm.

  • @richwind85

    @richwind85

    9 ай бұрын

    Please do your diligence on how they actually make the cultured meat. I have and it's definitely not for me and the environmental benefits are not proven.

  • @Robyn-Hood

    @Robyn-Hood

    9 ай бұрын

    @@kerryb2689 my family was farming I think very highly of farmers! There is a lot of money to be made in farming! The issue today is that there are bad people who are corrupting the industry and destroying crops and the animals so we all have to pay more for our food! Bill Gates is not buying the land to farm he is buying it to starve us! As well he wants us to eat fake food so they can put chemicals in our bodies why you ask just use your brain and think about it!!

  • @derekbuttery4776

    @derekbuttery4776

    9 ай бұрын

    @@dangraff8467 you're?

  • @lestermarshall6501
    @lestermarshall65019 ай бұрын

    Any farmer will tell you that staying in business is really hard. The joke is: A farmer won the lottery and someone asked him what he was going to do with all that money. The farmer said," Well, I guess I'll just keep farming until it's all gone."

  • @servant74

    @servant74

    9 ай бұрын

    If you think a farmer isn't gambling, figure out how much they make vs invested capital, and go look at their books. Are some rich? Yes, but there are many that scrape by and barely make it or have to sell it all and do something else. It is a business like every other. There are winners and there are loosers, and the odds of loosing are higher than winning especially if you stay with 'it always worked for grandpa'.

  • @philipvecchio3292

    @philipvecchio3292

    9 ай бұрын

    ​@@servant74One of the saddest things is that farms are incredibly capital intensive, so when a farmer passes away sometimes their assets show that they might have a multi-million dollar net worth, but it's all tied up in tractors and barns. It certainly not liquid. So a lot of times the death tax can be the end of a family farm unfortunately.

  • @sheilam4964

    @sheilam4964

    9 ай бұрын

    @lestermarshall6501 that is not joke that is the truth. Only Corporate Farms make a profit because they get more advantages in Income Tax and other such things that a Family Farmer is denied.

  • @jandrade1713

    @jandrade1713

    9 ай бұрын

    @@philipvecchio3292yeah a certain political person was trying to get rid of the death tax but they are trying get rid of him. Tells you what they really are trying to do to people.

  • @skeptibleiyam1093

    @skeptibleiyam1093

    9 ай бұрын

    Thank you for posting that joke so I didn't have to.

  • @jonatdrmarlo
    @jonatdrmarlo9 ай бұрын

    Many years ago I asked my grandmother, a farm wife, "What was the greatest invention in your lifetime?" Her response was, "The combine"

  • @jakeryker546

    @jakeryker546

    9 ай бұрын

    Did she also say, "Idon't care what they tell you in school. Cleopatra was black! ✊🏿"

  • @sambrusco672
    @sambrusco6729 ай бұрын

    RICKY, for agrovoltaics, you didn’t include that the panels can concentrate rain and dew to the CROP instead of all over the place. Alternatively, rainwater could be captured with gutters, stored and then precisely distributed to the crop as needed via pipes MOUNTED to the posts that support the panels.

  • @TwoBitDaVinci

    @TwoBitDaVinci

    9 ай бұрын

    great idea

  • @willm5814

    @willm5814

    9 ай бұрын

    Brilliant!

  • @Nphen

    @Nphen

    9 ай бұрын

    Used solar panels are really cheap. Most farms have enough space that panels performing at 90% of capacity won't be a problem. Simply the shade of the panel is helping the farm. The cheaper they can get the panels, the more crops they can shade. I see farm solar as the go-to place to put "second life" solar panels. The supply of which will only increase over time, as new installations go to higher efficiency panels.

  • @MisFakapek

    @MisFakapek

    9 ай бұрын

    Nope, there is nothing better than few hectoliters of monsanto special elixir. 3 times per year.

  • @y0nd3r

    @y0nd3r

    9 ай бұрын

    Dew. I knew it. Tech brings us one step closer to watering our crops with Mt. Dew.

  • @tomthumb3085
    @tomthumb30859 ай бұрын

    The reduction of herbicides is probably one of the most important agricultural discoveries of the last hundred years. As for AI being adapted for weeding, it will mark a revolution in food cost through the reduction of labour, the speed of operation and the time taken to market. All good news as far as I can see. Great video, thanks. 😊

  • @avada0

    @avada0

    8 ай бұрын

    The most important is genetic engineering.

  • @ialrakis5173
    @ialrakis51739 ай бұрын

    recently saw a video about a company growing veggies in water pumped out of fishtanks. So basically the food is eating the fish poo and filtering the water that goes back to the fish. I think there is a lot of potential in that because there will always be companies breeding freshwater fish on a large scale.

  • @DeeP_BosE

    @DeeP_BosE

    9 ай бұрын

    Aquaponics its the best we have yet of a complete cyclic ecosystem .

  • @dianapennepacker6854

    @dianapennepacker6854

    9 ай бұрын

    ​@@DeeP_BosEYeah that is why so many of them have failed? It has a long way to go for large scale agriculture.

  • @alanhat5252

    @alanhat5252

    9 ай бұрын

    @@dianapennepacker6854 an investor's first thought is that aquaponics is a 1960s fad that's now only used for illegal drugs so they're not interested which means that if you _do_ get up & running, when something expensive breaks your business has collapsed before you find funding for the replacement part. Economics & its fads, not science or agriculture, is what's killed aquaponics.

  • @gary.richardson

    @gary.richardson

    8 ай бұрын

    It takes more than one type of food source to create a balanced circle of life. We have tried and failed several times with bio domes but I think we are getting closer. I think last time, not enough focus was made with mycological input.

  • @DeeP_BosE

    @DeeP_BosE

    8 ай бұрын

    @@gary.richardson its impossible to have a plant only depending on ammonia in fish waste. It needs other chemicals that are in the hydroponic mix. It is a balanced cycle like a pond just the habitat of plants is separate from the fish, unlike a pond. The problem arises when v add methods to curb pathogens. There are probiotics that gets wasted . Including mycobacterium. Like say UV which kills all biotics.

  • @barriepotter3753
    @barriepotter37539 ай бұрын

    I have a greenhouse with a PV roof. Never had a problem growing things in it so I’m sure it can be used on the acres of industrial greenhouses

  • @Alphacheesehunter

    @Alphacheesehunter

    9 ай бұрын

    Greenhouses, my dude. Love 'em.

  • @y0nd3r

    @y0nd3r

    9 ай бұрын

    So all your sun comes from the side? I'm confused. I grow veggies that need 8 hours of direct sun. I use shade cloth for some of them but nothing like the full on block of a pv rooff.

  • @DeeP_BosE

    @DeeP_BosE

    9 ай бұрын

    let the PVs go and ul see plants growing in record times . otherwise plants just grow in the shade too . Just the differece betwwen a rocky sun starved nordic country and the amazon forest .

  • @niccrovaix649
    @niccrovaix6499 ай бұрын

    Thousands of recipe videos on You Tube. But farming is where it all starts! Yet how many videos are there about how our food is grown? (A dozen, maybe?) Foundational topic, passionate presenter, and lots of stuff I never knew about. Excellent work.

  • @howardrisby9621

    @howardrisby9621

    9 ай бұрын

    There's an increasing amount of activity on reversing soil degradation and desertification too. As a starting point, I'd recommend searching YT for 'Fools and Dreamers' (a project started nearly 40 years ago in NZ). To give you an idea of how much progress has been made in the interim, there's now a live project to 'green' the Sanai peninsula. This one is both ambitious (being an area close to that of Belgium) and if successful, would represent more of a "marathon forward" than a "great stride forward" .... and what's occurring in China means, amongst many other projects, one started by a stubborn subsistence farmer's wife, whose 30 year journey was (partially!) recognised by carrying a stage of the Beijing Olympic Torch and another by six villagers (this one's now on their 3rd generation of the wonderfully stubborn), they're on the verge of "losing" a complete desert in Inner Mongolia (according to the dictionary definition of a desert), which will drastically reduce the epic sandstorms which affect cities downwind (i.e. predominantly east) of the deserts There's no one solution to restoring land to health and the methods range from returning to ancient methods (e.g. optimising water retention in the Sahal) to cutting edge low carbon water desalination and recovery of marine silts, often deposited by catastrophic run-off of stormwater. See recent weather reports from several areas not currently ablaze for details of runoff.

  • @politicalfoolishness7491
    @politicalfoolishness74919 ай бұрын

    That laser gadget could smoke a lot of WEED in a field. 🤣LOL

  • @craighoelscher3774

    @craighoelscher3774

    9 ай бұрын

    Yeah, but what about the war on drugs?

  • @stevelacroix2917
    @stevelacroix29179 ай бұрын

    As I age, I am excited about being able to set up something (small scale) in my garden to reduce the number of weeds I have to pull. The real up side is the reduction of labor, chemicals, and effort. This would prompt home growers to grow their own food.

  • @y0nd3r

    @y0nd3r

    9 ай бұрын

    Ya, I'm not dropping this kind of money for a back yard grow. It doesn't even target insects and cats.

  • @kozmizm

    @kozmizm

    9 ай бұрын

    hahaha @@y0nd3r

  • @kozmizm

    @kozmizm

    9 ай бұрын

    That's the real revolution that the greedy selfish evil corporations don't want you to think about, and that's what I'm all about! Grow your own thanks to tech. The real social security is food and shelter

  • @zatar123
    @zatar1239 ай бұрын

    With vertical farming in addition to solar panels you would likely want to add some form of wind power to help keep the growlights going

  • @DeeP_BosE

    @DeeP_BosE

    9 ай бұрын

    yeah 1 area of solar panel can at the most support 1 floor of led lighting, so much losses in conversion it isnt feasible yet .

  • @leswallace2426
    @leswallace24269 ай бұрын

    I've worked on a farm and being able to 'weed' via laser would be so much better!!!

  • @LisaFaiss

    @LisaFaiss

    9 ай бұрын

    Do you think there might be issues with accidentally triggering wildfires with this technique or is there too much water around crops for this to be an issue?

  • @kennethferland5579

    @kennethferland5579

    9 ай бұрын

    Essentialy lasers are an upgraded version of flame weeding which has been a staple of organic weed control.

  • @hg2.

    @hg2.

    9 ай бұрын

    Is he on that stupid non-GMO bandwagon?

  • @robertboeckmann1111
    @robertboeckmann11119 ай бұрын

    Thank you for this interesting and educational presentation. You are absolutely correct that the vast majority of people don’t give a second thought to food production.

  • @anteater2443
    @anteater24439 ай бұрын

    Thank you for this video, that laser weeder is just about the coolest tech I have ever seen, more impactful than the Apple Vision pro.

  • @Sekir80

    @Sekir80

    9 ай бұрын

    Hahahahaha, that was a good one!

  • @pedrohorta6100
    @pedrohorta61009 ай бұрын

    A couple of topics I want to raise to spice conversation: most of new tech is being developed in a industrial farming mindset, for big scale farms with investment capability. Tech for small farmers normally comes through farm adaptations made by individual farmer's effort... Another thing is distribution of value throughout the food chain, the farmers normally get the smallest slice as they are often cut off from the end markets - this led to a collapse in the number of farmers in most so called industrialized countries since the middle of the XX century, not by choice but by destruction of livelihoods and, some times, forced migration to escape poverty. The result is a tendency towards oligopolies and oligopsonies. I think more research should focus on small and medium farmers' viability, recognizing also the social, environmental and economic benefits of having vibrant, liveable rural areas instead of industrial monocrop landscapes - which tend to be the beneficiaries of most R&D investments

  • @neo1053

    @neo1053

    8 ай бұрын

    Preach

  • @yorkyone2143
    @yorkyone21439 ай бұрын

    This weed killing laser is a great idea. Would think there would be less weight pressure from tires compressing the soil too as no heavy spray liquids need carrying.

  • @tmoosy

    @tmoosy

    9 ай бұрын

    you'd think it could be converted to be robotic too, drive itself on a set path and not need a tractor to drag it around.

  • @sambrusco672

    @sambrusco672

    9 ай бұрын

    @@docbrown6550oh really… who said that? Where’s the proof?

  • @sambrusco672

    @sambrusco672

    9 ай бұрын

    @@tmoosymuch smaller tractors would be needed! Maybe even versatile EV tractors. You don’t want to make a combined machine. Separate modules are easier to maintain.

  • @LisaFaiss

    @LisaFaiss

    9 ай бұрын

    @@docbrown6550 at least provide an explanation why or supply a link. I’m center left and only thing I see as issue is the potential to start a wildfire. Might not be an issue on irrigated field.

  • @hg2.

    @hg2.

    9 ай бұрын

    Is he on that stupid non-GMO bandwagon?

  • @hightidesed
    @hightidesed9 ай бұрын

    Great video! Would have loved to see Aquaponics on the list though, just the idea of it is so cool! Even if it has some challenges to overcome still.

  • @servant74

    @servant74

    9 ай бұрын

    IMHO, aquaponics and hydroponics should be complementary tech. I am sure there are MANY details I don't see that could change that too.

  • @lostboy8084
    @lostboy80849 ай бұрын

    Actually the reason why vanilla is expensive is that they have to be have to be hand pollination as we have almost completely removed the species that pollinate them.

  • @joangordoneieio
    @joangordoneieio9 ай бұрын

    When elites stop using private jets I might start giving a tiny hoot about climate idiocy. Instead of spending 100'$ of Billion$ on wars, they could have used it to discover & pay for new ways to feed house & clothe the world.

  • @orion1816
    @orion18169 ай бұрын

    Ricky, I've followed your channel since the early Tesla days. You're a good man doing good things. Thank you for all you share.

  • @letiziasparks2902
    @letiziasparks29029 ай бұрын

    Awesome video! Thank you.

  • @WolfHowl71
    @WolfHowl719 ай бұрын

    Ok the laser weeder is the bomb diggity! That's awesome! Also, I've always noticed that weeds and plants in general seem to grow better/faster in lightly shaded areas. Partially covering crops with solar panels seems like a win. Time will tell.

  • @recumbentrocks2929
    @recumbentrocks29299 ай бұрын

    Very interesting Ricky, thanks for sharing your research.

  • @KPHVAC
    @KPHVAC9 ай бұрын

    That laser robot that shoots weeds is amazing. No chemicals makes it a fantastic technology.

  • @HammerOn-bu7gx
    @HammerOn-bu7gx9 ай бұрын

    Both the targeted herbicide and laser are interesting. As with all things, the upfront and maintenance costs as well as reliability of the sensor systems when they get sprayed with mud and other matter that end up in farm fields will be interesting.

  • @dianapennepacker6854

    @dianapennepacker6854

    9 ай бұрын

    That laser system in action was on an other level! One of the most impressive things I've seen in a long time honestly. My question is how effective it is at actually destroying some weeds. Like did it actually completely kill them down to the root? Also costs for the chemical laser. I'd like to see a rechargable laser. CRISPR is improving some crops now. Sadly people are going to be against it - hypocrites.

  • @NeonNijahn
    @NeonNijahn9 ай бұрын

    I havebeen saying for a while that all these empty office buildings after the pandemic should be used for vertical farming and be subsidized. The drastic reduction in transportation cost and benefit to the environment from having locally grown greens is huge.

  • @andrewreynolds912

    @andrewreynolds912

    9 ай бұрын

    I could agree with that but they would need to be modified to have less energy consumption

  • @TwoBitDaVinci

    @TwoBitDaVinci

    9 ай бұрын

    that's an interesting idea! might be a zoning issue though?

  • @nathanieljames7462

    @nathanieljames7462

    9 ай бұрын

    they weren't built with those moisture loads in mind either and would need hvac modifications as well

  • @user-pq4il4xo9s

    @user-pq4il4xo9s

    9 ай бұрын

    You would need to tear down walls

  • @gernotritzau5948

    @gernotritzau5948

    9 ай бұрын

    That's a great idea, as a real estate investor, I will definitely take a second look at this, and as an electrician, I have to think about the power issues as well...lol

  • @tze-ven
    @tze-ven9 ай бұрын

    Thank you for reminding me to be grateful!

  • @thinktoomuchb4028
    @thinktoomuchb40289 ай бұрын

    Fascinating episode!

  • @scientificapproach6578
    @scientificapproach65789 ай бұрын

    Solar developers pay farmers on the high end $2,000/acre to lease the land for a solar farm. For the 10 acre farm: 10 / 3 * $2,000 = $6,666/year. Many project are unviable due to government regulation and lack of electrical infrastructure to transport the power to the city.

  • @user-xx4yl1hy7f
    @user-xx4yl1hy7f9 ай бұрын

    Ricky, thank you for your wonderfully encouraging video. Sheila Mink in New Mexico

  • @user-xv9tj3dl2o
    @user-xv9tj3dl2o9 ай бұрын

    You're welcome! I grew up on a small dairy farm, and also returned to Ag while caring for my parents in their 80's. The best way to be a steward of the earth is to assist nature, not fight it. :) Even the John Deere company realized this decades ago. one of their big ad tag lines was "If you feed the soil, the soil will feed you."

  • @kingmanazbob
    @kingmanazbob9 ай бұрын

    I saw an experiment where they tested purple LEDs against white LEDs of the same wattage, and the plants did better under the white LEDs.

  • @PapaSk8r
    @PapaSk8r9 ай бұрын

    First thing I thought when I saw the Laser weed killer - "No fire hazard here!"

  • @katiegreene3960
    @katiegreene39609 ай бұрын

    I want to see the Laser weeder in action.

  • @pariss1445
    @pariss14459 ай бұрын

    Love to see this.

  • @georgeoriold8798
    @georgeoriold87989 ай бұрын

    Great show

  • @qckndrty1
    @qckndrty19 ай бұрын

    What a time to be alive

  • @ge2719

    @ge2719

    9 ай бұрын

    Squeeze those papers

  • @Simple_But_Expensive
    @Simple_But_Expensive9 ай бұрын

    The laser weeder is amazing. Now if they can train it to kill insects and worms…

  • @sambrusco672

    @sambrusco672

    9 ай бұрын

    Worms and some insects are beneficial. BUT if the AI could learn which are “bad” or invasive, then THAT would be a game changer. It’s a quantum leap from my old magnifying glass! Moo-hoo-hoo-hoo-ha-ha-haaaaa! ☀️ 🐜 ☠️

  • @LisaFaiss

    @LisaFaiss

    9 ай бұрын

    I would buy it i it did that. So sick of the squash bugs and potato beetles damaging my garden.

  • @kennethferland5579

    @kennethferland5579

    9 ай бұрын

    My thought exactly, though bug systems might be based on vacume cleaner hose like principles as it's gona be hard to fry a bug without damaging plants where as suction offers a convenient way to get into a plant canopy which might offer concealment from a laser.

  • @Simple_But_Expensive

    @Simple_But_Expensive

    9 ай бұрын

    @@sambrusco672 That was what I was trying to say. Should have used “caterpillars” instead. Some insects indeed are beneficial. I live in farm country. Farmers use biocontrol around here all the time. A particular type of wasp to control whiteflies, ladybugs to control aphids, etc. The problem is there isn’t always a solution for every insect. Also, nuts and some crops are susceptible to fungal infections. If the lasers could burn off the infected sections while leaving healthy tissue, that might be helpful. I don’t know about that last. Anything to reduce the use of herbacides, insecticides, and fungalcides would be useful, both by lowering costs and for reducing runoff. One robot I read about was in development years ago, but I haven’t heard anything since. It basically crawled a field and sampled the soil at the base of each plant. It then analysed the sample and applied the exact amount and type of fertilizer required for just that plant. The following is from a decade old memory of reading the article, so take it with a grain of salt: The problems the developers had was getting the robot to recognize the plant base (which AI would be very suited to), and analyzing the soil fast enough. The sample arm was at the front, and the application arm was at the back, meaning that the sample had to be analyzed within the time it took for the robot to pass over the plant. The fastest they had been able to do it was 24 hours per acre. One of the ideas they had was to abandon the individual plant, and do small areas instead, but the article stated that that lowered the economic end of it too far. Another article was about the general use of robots. The idea was that the farmer would mount low power transmitters on poles around the field. Various robots would use these transmitters in a “mini GPS” manner. One robot to prepare the soil with plowing, fertilizing, and planting, another robot that would lay down drip feeder tubing to each plant to reduce water usage. Other specialized robots that would be periodically released into the field for pest control, pollination, etc. Another robot for harvesting. All in all, the article mentioned a constellation of 12 robots to handle everything from soup to nuts. The most complicated was the harvester that would require attachments for each type of crop. AI combined with modern PLCs would make all of these viable. AI to decide what action to take, and a PLC to take the action. The next problem is making them robust enough to last and economical enough to be worth the farmer’s consideration. Modular design would be critical for this, so one part failing doesn’t necessitate replacing the entire robot. I am pretty sure that we are just beginning a new green revolution. At the beginning of the last green revolution we saw the farmer go from horse and plow to heavy machinery operator. This new revolution will see them go from heavy machinery operator to robot repair and programmer. It used to be a given farmer could harvest one or two acres of corn before it rotted on the stalk. Now a single farmer can harvest hundreds of acres (see Iowa). Next, a farmer won’t harvest any. He will be back in the barn, working on robots. Along the way we should see much less water, fertilizer and insecticide use, much less crop losses, increased crop production per acre, and much less runoff into rivers. As a side effect, unskilled farm labor will become a rarity, and farm labor in general will be much reduced. On the other side, non crop farming is fixing to change also. If beef, pork, and poultry cell cloning can be successfully brought online, and can be tailored to have the look and texture of the original, everything changes. The two things most likely to kill this tech is purists who won’t eat anything but the real thing, and the food producers instinct to “improve” it. Once you get it so that I can’t tell the difference between a cloned and real T-bone, stop messing with it. If I can tell the difference, I will always go for the real thing. According to the latest demographic info, we may not need this tech. For some reason, most of the world seems to have stopped having babies. Chinese, Russian, and most European countries have reduced child production so much that this is effectively their last generation. In the case of the Chinese, the ethnic Han people effectively stopped 40 years ago. In Russia it was 20-30 years ago. In most of Europe, 20 years ago. In another 60 years, the vast majority of Europeans will be ethically middle eastern and african. Russia will be mostly central asians. China will still be China, but there will be no Han. Check out the posts made by Peter Zeihan over the last several years for more on that.

  • @wobby1516
    @wobby15169 ай бұрын

    Something I’ve found hard to understand is why supermarkets in the U.K. haven’t fitted Solar to their roofs. They are huge users of power with all their freezers a open refrigerators which on a warm summers day could be run from solar as well as their air conditioning. In France I often see car parks with canopies covered in solar panels.

  • @the_lost_navigator7266

    @the_lost_navigator7266

    9 ай бұрын

    It has just become law in France that any car park with more than 80 spaces has to be fitted with a solar canopy. As well as generating energy, cars are sheltered from the sun, reducing AC draw when restarted. The arrays also keep the surface of the car park cooler which will help keep local temperature lower. A great idea that needs repeating everywhere.

  • @jd35711
    @jd357119 ай бұрын

    i appreciate what you do - always nice to see people looking for solutions instead of giving in to doomerism or threatening civil war.

  • @keng528
    @keng5289 ай бұрын

    Thank you for helping me remember what I've already known ...food is the new gold....

  • @nicholasklangos9704
    @nicholasklangos97049 ай бұрын

    I always wondered about if a thing like Argo voltaic farming could be possibly an idea to provide partial shade for certain crops and raising the solar panels higher and creating water dew systems inside them to grow farming under them! Now someone has done it! Cool!

  • @georgeflitzer7160
    @georgeflitzer71609 ай бұрын

    Amazing!!

  • @lustenaderj
    @lustenaderj9 ай бұрын

    I always wanted to see a vertical farming setup with sun tunnels on the southern walls directing the light to the plants. Use the LEDs to backup for overcast days and to supplement and fine tune the wavelengths

  • @matias86532
    @matias865329 ай бұрын

    20 seconds before i saw the laser weed killer i thought, maybe lasers is a good idea. Added to the list of "inventions" i invent too late lol

  • @Alphacheesehunter
    @Alphacheesehunter9 ай бұрын

    Foooooood. It's what matters most. With what is happening in the world, we'll all rely on advanced farming more and more. Honestly, we should be diving headlong into these technologies.

  • @liquidminds

    @liquidminds

    9 ай бұрын

    Calculations show that the food we produce today would already be enough for 20bn people. Our main issue is not that we don't produce enough, but that we throw away too much. In parts, because people buy food that they don't use, in other parts, because throwing it away is cheaper then sending it around the world to give out for free. The vast majority of food in this world is still grown and harvested by hand. In those parts we can essentially skip the "Trucks and Pesticides"-Step of agriculture and create even more sustainable ways of growing food.

  • @Farreach
    @Farreach9 ай бұрын

    i am absolutely glad i found your channel .. its a treasure among so much garbage .. i am never not impressed by the subjects you choose to go over .. keep up the good work man

  • @danrayson
    @danrayson9 ай бұрын

    Anyone else noticed that if the WEF were to make a science show, this is what they would make? Anyone?

  • @scientificapproach6578
    @scientificapproach65789 ай бұрын

    Vertical farms have very little profit, and many have no profit. -Areas with high electrical cost don’t work. -Areas in the countryside don’t work, traditional farming is cheaper -Big city you can sell the food for more but the real estate cost is to high

  • @alansnyder8448

    @alansnyder8448

    9 ай бұрын

    Yes someone who gets it. I think most of the posters here have never been on a real farm.

  • @OneWildTurkey
    @OneWildTurkey9 ай бұрын

    I have to question the ratio of farmers to people fed. Is that taking into account the number of individual/family farms vs the corporate farms? Because corporate farms have greatly offset the balance that used to exist. I wonder about vertical farming - should they try franchising and making kits available for people to place them on top of skyscrapers in big cities?

  • @Weiningc66
    @Weiningc669 ай бұрын

    These are some good ideas.

  • @theatheistpaladin
    @theatheistpaladin9 ай бұрын

    Soon 0 Farmers will feed all the people.

  • @bobuncle8704
    @bobuncle87049 ай бұрын

    How about looking at aquaponics? A self contained ecological cycle that can produce fish and produce in an ongoing manner

  • @cmw3737
    @cmw37377 ай бұрын

    Farmers are the most underappreciated people on the planet. They are botanists, biologists, meteorologists, futures traders, mechanics, veterinarians, accountants, pest controllers, heavy vehicle drivers and businessmen and still manage to sleep and have families. I've still probably missed some essential skill of theirs. They deserve all the praise and help they can get.

  • @waynesworldofsci-tech
    @waynesworldofsci-tech9 ай бұрын

    Worked on a farm in the Seventies, and I HATED weeding. Oh man, that laser weed killer is the BOMB!

  • @gardenweedsgrower
    @gardenweedsgrower9 ай бұрын

    2:33 this laser tech is extremely cool to cut down on chemicals. But Regenerative Farming already exists. learning to use “weeds” as beneficial living mulch, chop and drop to feed the plants and protect the soil from evaporation. Please highlight Regenerative Farming tech and processes also. 😊

  • @jandebuyssere
    @jandebuyssere7 ай бұрын

    what is your stance on phosphor? this is one element all plants need to grow and we have no substitution for when we run out of it to make fertiliser...

  • @tomthumb3085
    @tomthumb30859 ай бұрын

    One benefit of vertical farming is that the total crop superstructure can be elevated above flood levels, which, given the current and projected incidence of severe flooding, has to be a worthwhile investment. We just need to figure out a way to give the livestock the same protections. Noah’s Ark seems to be suggesting answers to that though! Keep the videos coming Ricky, always very thought provoking content.

  • @simonpannett8810
    @simonpannett88109 ай бұрын

    Farming is one area that Robots and AI could increase productivity whilst staying organic! Soil sampling also good to know where more microbes and organic matter are needed. Cultured and yeast type production has huge potential to replace animal sourced proteins! Fruit farming can be used alongside agrovoltaics!

  • @benmcreynolds8581
    @benmcreynolds85819 ай бұрын

    Hey Ricky: Random question but i live in the Pacific Northwest and we have been seeing a lot more Dry, Hot weather. Which leads to more Fire's, droughts, low water levels. (Basically a compounding issue. Impacting the environment, humans, atmosphere, fire's releasing lots of added carbon, etc.) *So I'm asking: (is it possible to cover the hypothetical idea of seeing if we can add specific things to increase moisture/cloud formation/rain in the atmosphere and even maybe help absorb some amount of the increased heat, etc. That has been reeking havoc on our "used to be temperate rainforest ecosystem with old growth forest's and wetlands..?" I really think if we can increase or improve the drought situation here in the PNW that it could have a ton of positive benefits to all sorts of other things in the surrounding environment and neighboring environments, etc. Idk.) I just had to ask?? Idk if we even have any viable options we can attempt to utilize but i think we should try before things get any worse....

  • @MinusMedley
    @MinusMedley9 ай бұрын

    Another one I've been keeping an eye on, is Solar Foods and their Solein growing vats.

  • @extraincomesuz
    @extraincomesuz9 ай бұрын

    Growing food is sexy...and I love to compost. And growing with vertical farms is soooo great and fast but I truly love this video and all the cool tech. Laser zapper!? - I want one.❤😊

  • @lunarminx
    @lunarminx9 ай бұрын

    I read that a product made with vinegar ( much more than just that ). This really needs to be developed, a fertilizer type that gets photosynthesis to happen without the sun or grow lights. I can't say anything else about it as it all was over my head. I do use led grow lights indoors but if the grids went down, I live in an apartment without a balcony, so growing would be out for me and the millions in the same situation.

  • @goatlord51
    @goatlord519 ай бұрын

    Lasers and graphics cards are not cheap. I have a hard time believing that first story could ever be cost effective.

  • @ninefingers5480

    @ninefingers5480

    9 ай бұрын

    One of the banners said 3 year payback, so with reality factor I'd say 5 year which is decent but not great for a farmer. I believe this is better than weed killer though. My dad realized the payback from chemicals wasn't that great and questioned it so he looked back it costs vs yields an initially really good but dropped off. Really hard to restore land to natural and still make money. So this could be a great solution. I also question how long before knock off tech and scale drops the price.

  • @NickCombs
    @NickCombs9 ай бұрын

    Another big issue with our land use is replacing diversity with a single type of plant. It's endangering many native bees and the plants & predators that depend on them. Vertical farming is at least addressing that concern, but clearly we need alternatives that are more economically resilient.

  • @atomicdmt8763
    @atomicdmt87639 ай бұрын

    many questions however. I do wonder about unseen dangers of growing in partial spectrum light... long term health studies, unknown unknowns.

  • @Frenotx
    @Frenotx9 ай бұрын

    Solar on top of vertical farms certainly makes sense, but considering one of the big advantages of vertical farming is well, being more vertical (more stuff per square meter of footprint), they're kind of fundamentally at odds with powering themselves (at just fully) with something like solar, which scales based on how many square feet of space you have for it.

  • @theg1309
    @theg13099 ай бұрын

    Key word CULT!

  • @deejnutz2068
    @deejnutz20689 ай бұрын

    One thing to note: without massive legislative changes agrovoltaics will not be selling their energy for anywhere near $0.10 per kwh. Unless you are willing to basically become an entity under the utility or find some other state contract you'll be lucky to get more than a cent per kwh generated.

  • @jasongannon7676
    @jasongannon76769 ай бұрын

    Very cool

  • @SapioiT
    @SapioiT9 ай бұрын

    The biggest costs for vertical farming are electricity costs for LEDs and for ventilation. If passive ventilation and natural sunlight is used with mirrors and lenses (including fresnel lenses and fresnel mirrors), that cost could be significantly decreased, for example down to only needing to close the passive ventilation system for the duration of the night or when freezing is predicted or detected, to keep the plants from freezing, and to partially close the window blinds when the sunlight is too strong for the plants it reflects and/or refracts upon. And with climate change, we will see places which experience global warming increasingly using metal-sheet mirrors or other materials to effectively shade the plants from the scorching sun, especially during the hottest hours of the day. Even without a greenhouse, simply shading the plants for a few hours a day, which can be done passively by carefully choosing the angle of the shading parts/panels, could increase the output by having less plants wither due to excessive sunlight or heat, even if airflow is not restricted like it is with normal greenhouses (even if/when they are partially opened to natural airflow). Also, they have to focus on things which aren't so easy to grow that most people grow them already. For example, having very sweet fresh strawberries on shelves in freezing temperatures, which to also be grown without pesticides and without chemical fertilizers (though that doesn't mean one can't blend weeds with water and leave them in a dark-colored tank in sunlight to make compost tea, then strain the liquid and use it as liquid fertilizer, then take the solids and put them in a compost bin for making solid fertilizers more slowly, or feed them to fish in an aquaponics setup. And using plastic to which very thin reflective metal sheets (i.e. aluminium foil) is glued (or chemically attached) can be used to concentrate more sunlight onto a greenhouse, in places (i.e. near the poles or away from the equator) and time periods (during winters) with less light, for example in the form of fresnel mirror walls which can be several stories tall near the permanent-snow areas. It's something post-war Russia could do to prevent famines after having to pay for the war (i.e. the "special economic operation" affecting it's import-export, and lack of skilled people due to "early expiration" of life during the "special military operation" war, and internal turmoil reducing trade between parts of the country, and many other problems which could arise).

  • @kevincleveland763
    @kevincleveland7638 ай бұрын

    I almost forgot I really love that we Zapper.

  • @alwayslearning8365
    @alwayslearning83659 ай бұрын

    The robotic laser weed zapper is very cool technology.

  • @servant74

    @servant74

    9 ай бұрын

    I'd love to see low end version for our garden

  • @briangleason4435

    @briangleason4435

    9 ай бұрын

    Just a hand-held one would be all a guy would need for a garden

  • @Rawi888
    @Rawi8889 ай бұрын

    This must have been one expensive video to produce. The graphics are so impressive.

  • @seanyoung6010
    @seanyoung60109 ай бұрын

    I like the stats here "water shortages and drought conditions are becoming much more common IN THE NEWS." The perceived value of a new product based on the current news cycle.

  • @JJs_playground
    @JJs_playground9 ай бұрын

    The channel *freethink* did a great video about the LASER weeder.

  • @kevincleveland763
    @kevincleveland7638 ай бұрын

    One of the heads of the US Department of Agriculture once said "there is money to be made in food as long as you're not growing it" I don't remember the name I can't find it online. However most of the systems you mentioned are sort of growing food but are heavily dependent on technology and therefore on fossil fuels, you cannot grow food forever on limited resources.

  • @CC-ul3qo
    @CC-ul3qo9 ай бұрын

    But Rock, who wants to EAT this Frankenstein food?? You go first!!!😂😂

  • @Potrimpo
    @Potrimpo9 ай бұрын

    Agrovoltaics. Do they use transparent solar panels that absorb UV rays while keeping the visible spectrum passing through?

  • @ninefingers5480
    @ninefingers54809 ай бұрын

    Take a look at farmbot (think CNC or 3D printer but over soil). I grew up on a small farm and it has issues mainly they are not farmers but someone who travels and needed something to tend their garden while away. At first it seems expensive, but compare it with the price of a tractor which keeps smaller farms out of the market. You can buy a many of the largest farmbots for the price of an entry level tractor. Then you need to fuel it. Farmbot can be powered by a small solar panel. I'd love to see the laser put on a farmbot since it would not need a CO2 laser so a cheep LED laser would be fine at that scale. However, it's old fashioned squish the weed method is fine. I would like to see an LED laser pest bug zapper on it, but again good old diatomatious earth is cheep.

  • @lnwolf41
    @lnwolf419 ай бұрын

    You do realize that most farmers either plow under, or throw away 30%-40% of their crops, because they don't look pretty, or the demand is much lower than the supply. As for the vertical farming, there are thousands of big box stores that are empty, that can be retrofitted, and it already has a power system that can easily be used.

  • @turningpoint4238
    @turningpoint42389 ай бұрын

    RethinkX have a paper out for free from their website on precision fermentation. Although the paper is very narrow in it's scope both in what it can be used for but also the potential of this technology. Basically you can produce any protein you want like making beer. Here in Australia I believe there are three companies looking to make milk proteins with this. My only worry is farming as so many other industries are going to be disrupted. With this especially in more conservative industries like farming there will be massive amounts of strikes as they demand protection. I know what they are like I come from farming stock and have worked occasionally in the industry. So expect interruptions to our food supply over the next twenty years. One of the reasons I'm building an over sized garden at my new house just as an insurance. Not that we will starve in wealthier countries but certain things maybe hard to get for quite sometime.

  • @freddoflintstono9321
    @freddoflintstono93219 ай бұрын

    Re. vertical farms: what about pollination?

  • @PattymacMakes

    @PattymacMakes

    9 ай бұрын

    None of the crops they want to grow vertically require pollination. They are microgreens and other greens like spinach, lettuces and kale. Those are literally just leaves so pollination is not necessary. Only fruit requires pollination. Eggplant, peppers, tomatoes, cucumbers etc are actually fruits. I hope that helps.

  • @jimatsydney
    @jimatsydney9 ай бұрын

    These developments are really exciting. Thank you for highlighting. I would argue some of the new tech would have farmers shaking in their boots, precision fermentation is likely to bankrupt many dairies. But the premise of the video about feeding the word is a bit flawed, 60 percent of all agricultural land / water and other inputs goes into feeding livestock. We can all make a big difference by reducing our meat intake, then the world will have plenty of food.

  • @TeslaEVolution
    @TeslaEVolution9 ай бұрын

    TESLA DOJO - might be great here : )

  • @chrismartin7579
    @chrismartin75799 ай бұрын

    These technology advances are great, but they are very capital intensive. If the carbon robotics equipment has a continuous duty cycle, then I see promise in FaaS (Farming as a Service) where the equipment is deployed to farmers without the farmer providing capital outlay. Vertical farming has promise as well, but so many companies have failed because of uncontrolled variable costs. especially energy (electricity) expenses. Thin margins and high capital costs make for a tough investment environment.

  • @Tsuchimursu
    @Tsuchimursu9 ай бұрын

    The only ones that make sense to me are agrovoltaics and the laser weeder. The weeder is actually exciting and makes a lot of sense, as long as cleaning the system off dust and grunge is made easy

  • @TheWhyGuyChannel
    @TheWhyGuyChannel9 ай бұрын

    With acres of crops being shaded by panel, how do they harvest?

  • @DeeP_BosE

    @DeeP_BosE

    9 ай бұрын

    Novelty

  • @NaumRusomarov
    @NaumRusomarov9 ай бұрын

    that is a rather impressive machine.

  • @charlescloudy
    @charlescloudy9 ай бұрын

    People forget but when I was young food was seasonal. You ate what was in season. Now with modern tech and logistics you can have veggies year round and eat what you want to eat.

  • @minicoopernirvana
    @minicoopernirvana9 ай бұрын

    As a Christmas tree farm worker, landscaper, and biologist... I feel like I just saw the future with the laser weeder

  • @god_ynwa

    @god_ynwa

    9 ай бұрын

    It's old tech I guess 😂.... I use it on Farming Simulator 22

  • @danbhakta
    @danbhakta9 ай бұрын

    They should use light conduits for vertical farming.

  • @geoffmurray2245
    @geoffmurray22459 ай бұрын

    Put the laser weeder on a rail on the back of the solar panels. Could charge it's self as it went.

  • @billfargo9616
    @billfargo96169 ай бұрын

    What happens to the REEs in the solar panels as they age and decay?

  • @dadofchen
    @dadofchen9 ай бұрын

    I love this capability! I also love cover crops BIGTIME! The cover crops keep soil erosion down which is a major problem, (Iowa ag fields becoming offshore Louisiana). They also and can lock nitrogen and organics into the soil. No solution is the right one for every situation and I applaud another tool for the toolbox.

  • @Elated_Llama
    @Elated_Llama9 ай бұрын

    farming may be boring But the technology behind modern and future farming is nothing but awe inspiring.

  • @petterbirgersson4489
    @petterbirgersson44899 ай бұрын

    14:52 The fact that you can buy mangos at the grocery store all year round, is kind of a big part of the problem. You have to be more mindful of what you eat and focus on what's currently available in the region where you live and what is available during this season. We must restrict what we eat somehow and stop being so reliant on imports from far away . Technology is fine and dandy and all that, but in the end of the day sustainability implies a sense of not being wasteful but careful about the environment around you.

  • @user-xv9tj3dl2o
    @user-xv9tj3dl2o9 ай бұрын

    Another 'Agri-voltaic' possibility is grazing lands. and there are current panel fields that are being 'mowed' with goats. and it is less expensive for the utility co. than mowing/trimming, and no gas, loud noise, grounds equipment maintenance, ect!

  • @mkidd8806
    @mkidd88069 ай бұрын

    What's the cost of the Laser machine and what size farm would benifit? Many times mom and pop can't afford this machine. This technology is great but usually large corporation farming truly benifit.

  • @ge2719

    @ge2719

    9 ай бұрын

    Maybe then another company can provide them as a service that farms pay for. Just like they pay for pesticides. Farms dont generally manufacure their own pesticide. It would be expensive for them to start doing that too. If theyre smart the pesticide companies would add lasers to their options they have for their customers.

  • @SP30305ATL

    @SP30305ATL

    9 ай бұрын

    Small farms have for decades rented machines they needed beyond the ones they use all the time. I imagine it would depend how often you needed to use it--maybe one day every two weeks or so and one entrepreneur could buy one and rent it out to 10-15 local farmers.

  • @nicholasklangos9704
    @nicholasklangos97049 ай бұрын

    I think vertical farming and container farming can work if done right with solar farms together!

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