Maximum Yield USA August/September 2020 | Page 36

Aussie Taps into Hydroponic Vanilla Growing When Australian inventor David Soo learned of the lucrative market for fresh vanilla, he developed a commercially viable method of growing the sometimes tricky and labor-intensive crop. He built a custom, 535-square foot greenhouse with controlled growing conditions that can be adjusted remotely. Soo has 200 vanilla vines that are growing three times faster than in a plantation environment thanks to vertical soil-filled trellises, which allow the vines to take root and get nutrients at all levels. The trellis columns rotate automatically so the vines get equal light. “The trellises are designed for what we call threedimensional plants — because they’re vines and they have their root structures coming out of the nodes at all different parts along the vine, they don’t come from the bottom,” says Soo, adding he was confident of yielding about 2,200 pounds of vanilla beans from his crop, which would be worth about US$387,000. — abc.net.au USDA Announces Urban Agriculture Grants The US Department of Agriculture (USDA) recently announced the availability of $3 million for grants through its new Office of Urban Agriculture and Innovative Production. The competitive grants will support the development of urban agriculture and innovative production projects through two categories: Planning Projects and Implementation Projects. “These grant opportunities underscore USDA’s commitment to all segments of agriculture, including swiftly expanding areas of urban agriculture,” says Bill Northey, under secreta for Farm Production and Conservation. “Such projects have the poten address important issues such as food access and education and to su innovative ways to increase local food production in urban environmen USDA is making $1 million available for projects initiating or expanding farming efforts of people and organizations in urban areas and suburb $2 million is for Implementation Projects that accelerate existing and e models of urban, indoor, and other practices that serve multiple farme — hortdaily.com Startup Generates Interest with Environmental Breakthro A Purdue University-affiliated startup focusing on technology that turn wastewater algae into specialty chemicals recently received its second in just two weeks. Gen3Bio boasts proprietary technology that redirec from an environmental hazard into profitable, environmentally friendly Gen3Bio got a $20,000 investment through the Elevate Nexus Regiona Seed competition and another $20,000 pilot plant grant. Algae is prod wastewater treatment facilities and is typically disposed of in a landfill cost and subsequently releases greenhouse gases into the atmospher technology transforms the waste algae into biobased specialty chemic aquaculture fish food, succinic acid, and biodegradable plastics. “The to repurpose algae from costly waste (into) beneficial material. Our pa enzyme technology breaks open the algae and extracts the nutrients required to create chemicals that create useful and environmentally beneficial products,” says Kelvin Okamoto, founder and CEO of Gen3B — purdue.edu