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A FARM WITH A VIEW: ECO-MINDED HOLLAND DEBATES THE NOTION OF A HIGH-RISE

FARMING TOWER WITH FLOORS AND FLOORS OF CHICKENS, PIGS AND PLANTS


Alanna Mitchell

http://www.globeandmail.com/servlet/ArticleNews/PEstory/TGAM/20020921/FCFARM


The plan had hardly come off the Dutch drawing table before it was,

according to this story, dubbed the "trotter towers" in other parts of

Europe. Not to mention "pigs in skyscrapers."

The story says that the so-called Deltapark, from some of the best minds in

the Netherlands, poses the idea of building a high-rise megafarm in

Rotterdam that would house 300,000 pigs, 1.2 million chickens, thousands of

fish and a vast garden under the same roof.

The aim is to make a farming complex where the wastes from one endeavour are

used as fuel for the one next door. So the body heat and gases from pigs

would warm up greenhouses for the vegetables. The extra plant material from

the greenhouses would feed the pigs. The pig manure, processed and

concentrated, would enrich the soil for plants.

And down below would lie a slaughterhouse, where the pigs and chickens would

eventually meet their fate, close enough to Rotterdam's ports to make short

work of the transportation of the meat. Even the fat rendered from the

slaughterhouse floor would be used for energy.

Ecologically speaking, it would be a closed loop, with little going to

waste.

Jan Broeze, an applied mathematician at the Agrotechnology Research

Institute in Wageningen and one of the brains behind Deltapark, was quoted

as saying, "We wanted to start a discussion in society."

The story says that the plan has not only been mocked, but also praised and

reviled in a debate that has galvanized Dutch society to examine some of its

most prized values. And as Canada's farmers struggle through yet another

grim fall and winter and wrestle over how to make farming more efficient,

the Dutch debate could hold fascinating lessons.

The story goes on to say there is a fierce Dutch pride in the quality of the

food produced in The Netherlands. The Dutch insist on the best and are drawn

to organic farming.

Yet there were so many pigs in The Netherlands a few years ago -- 16

million, outnumbering the humans -- that the country got into trouble with

the European Union for producing too much environmentally dangerous manure.

Soil quality and water quality were being affected. Recently, the number of

pigs has been cut down to 12 million, in a nod to the EU guidelines.

One of the problems Dr. Broeze saw immediately was that while pigs lived on

farms, the feed they needed did not, and had to be trucked in. Then the

fattened animals had to be trucked to a slaughterhouse. And the meat then

had to be trucked to market.

To Canadians, the distances to truck anywhere in The Netherlands may seem

small. But Dr. Broeze pointed out that paying for drivers and fuel ends up

being a significant cost to pig farmers, and sends carbon dioxide and other

pollutants into the atmosphere.

What if the transportation of animals could be abolished?

What if rural lands could bear less burden from farming? What if the the

postwar ideal of the mixed farm could return, a reverse of the trend toward

specialized farms?

That's when the idea of the Deltapark complex was born. Dr. Broeze's team

started with the idea of having enough animals in one place to make full use

of a slaughterhouse. That gave them the immense scale of the project: It

would be a kilometre long and nearly half a kilometre wide, six storeys high

and contain roughly 200 hectares agricultural space. The whole project would

produce organic food and be set beside the biggest port in Europe.

Dr. Broeze was quoted as saying, "In principle, you do not need land for pig

keeping, only for the deposit of manure."

The plan calls for processing of the manure inside the complex, making it

more concentrated, to improve its quality. That kind of technology is

cheaper to build big in one place than small on farms all over The

Netherlands. The complex would also boast wind turbines on top to produce

whatever energy the pigs don't.

Dr. Broeze reckons that the pigs would actually have more space in trotter

towers than they would on a traditional farm. As well, atmospheric pollution

now emitted when heating up traditional greenhouses could be dramatically

reduced.

The story says that it's a far cry from the Canadian urge to use more

chemicals and drugs to improve farming efficiency. And while transportation

distances are immense in Canada, the government's response has been to

remove transportation subsidies for grain and other products.

In the Netherlands, the instant reaction to Deltapark was negative. The

Dutch are used to thinking of their food grown carefully in the countryside

by loving farmers. Deltapark seemed too much like the factory farms and

other industrial agriculture they shudder at in North America.


What animal is usually the product of a ranch?
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