Print Email Facebook Twitter What horticulture and space exploration can learn from each other Title What horticulture and space exploration can learn from each other: The Mission to Mars initiative in the Netherlands Author Vermeulen, A.C.J. (TU Delft System Engineering) Hubers, C.G.W. (TU Delft Delft Projectmanagement; Leiden-Delft-Erasmus Center for Sustainability) de Vries, L. (TU Delft Beheer Grootschalige (EU) Projecten) Brazier, F.M. (TU Delft System Engineering) Department Delft Projectmanagement Date 2020 Abstract The horticulture sector in the Netherlands is a global leader due to technological advancements, knowledge of greenhouse cultivation with high productivities and low resource usage, and entrepreneurship. The Netherlands is the second largest exporter of vegetables in the world, and more than half of its land area is used for agriculture with some greenhouse complexes covering 175 acres. However, to retain this leading position, the sector has acknowledged that it needs to keep innovating. To further reduce waste and environmental impact, an innovative production strategy is being developed to support a circular economy: the circular greenhouse. LDE Greenport Hub is an entity of the strategic alliance of the universities of Leiden, Delft and Erasmus and is focused on horticulture scientific research and education in collaboration with major horticulture industry partners (such as sector association Glastuinbouw Nederland). It has initiated ‘Mission to Mars’, a program to boost innovation and development of the circular greenhouse by adopting concepts and technologies from space. Space is inherently focused on circularity because of scarce resources. A good example is the MELiSSA concept of the European Space Agency in which human waste is broken down into nutrients for crops and algae by a series of bioreactors. The crops and algae consequently provide food and oxygen for the crew again. The Mission to Mars program started with a lecture series in the beginning of 2018 at the World Horti Center, a horticulture business and innovation center in Naaldwijk. In seven lectures different aspects of sustainability and circularity were explored together with researchers, students, growers and horticulturists. The lectures covered (1) energy, (2) water, (3) lighting and climate, (4) soil, substrate and plant health, (5) material and energy streams, (6) digitization and automation, and (7) urban and vertical farming. It quickly became clear that not only terrestrial horticulture could benefit from space technologies, but that human space exploration could equally benefit from the technical and tacit knowledge of growers and horticulturists for food production in space. A list of potential research topics was identified. These topics are to be explored in a follow-up ESA Innovation Exchange, together with space technology partner ICE Cubes. The goal is to go beyond the circular greenhouse and demonstrate how space itself can be an environment for plant biology innovation, and hence increase future food security on Earth. Subject Circular greenhouseHorticultureInnovationSpace biologySpace farmingTechnology transfer To reference this document use: http://resolver.tudelft.nl/uuid:2ae891ad-649d-4e34-b4fc-f0de47a84dc5 DOI https://doi.org/10.1016/j.actaastro.2020.05.015 ISSN 0094-5765 Source Acta Astronautica, 177, 421-424 Part of collection Institutional Repository Document type journal article Rights © 2020 A.C.J. Vermeulen, C.G.W. Hubers, L. de Vries, F.M. Brazier Files PDF 1_s2.0_S0094576520302988_main.pdf 257.7 KB Close viewer /islandora/object/uuid:2ae891ad-649d-4e34-b4fc-f0de47a84dc5/datastream/OBJ/view