Texas Schools Tap Container Farms to Fill Cafeterias with Fresh Produce
Eric Galatas, Public News Service – TX
SAN ANTONIO, Texas – Texas schools are using refrigerated freight
containers converted into hydroponic farms as an extension of the
classroom. At IDEA charter schools, students learn how to grow leafy greens and other vegetables, and deliver their harvests directly to the school cafeteria.
Caroline Katsiroubas – director of community relations at Freight Farms,
the company that developed the technology – says schools are using the
farms in part to shift traditional food culture and improve health by
giving students nutritious options.
“In the San Antonio IDEA school’s campus, they don’t use salt or pepper
in their cafeteria,” says Katsiroubas. “And they’re growing herbs
specifically in their farm to make a seasoning.”
The University of North Texas also is using the container farms as a lab
for a wide range of hands-on learning opportunities in biology, organic
chemistry, nutrition and culinary arts, as well as business, computer
science and marketing.
Many schools have developed certificate programs and majors around
sustainable food production, which gives graduates a leg up on joining
the growing ag-tech field or starting their own farm.
Because climate is controlled inside the container, food can be grown
all school year long with a predictable commercial-scale output.
Greenery units can support 13,000 plants at a time, producing harvests
of up to 900 heads of lettuce per week.
Katsiroubas says the technology is useful in a state such as Texas, and
notes Houston freight farmers played a critical role providing food
during Hurricane Harvey.
“These container farms act as a way to control the food-supply chain,
and make it resistant to shocks like extreme weather patterns or
hurricanes or drought,” says Katsiroubas.
Katsiroubas says the container farms also are helping lower schools’
overall carbon footprint. Harvests happen just steps from the dining
hall, which all but eliminates transportation emissions and packaging.
She says the farms use 99% less water than a traditional farm, running
with as little as five gallons per day, less than the average
dishwasher.