Advancements in vertical farming: A review of potentials, challenges, and prospects
- Authors
- Akpenpuun Timothy Denen; Sanusi Hamidu Oladimeji; Ogundele Oluwasegun Moses; Usman Abdulgafar; Azuatalam Reginald Gbenga; Ogunlowo Qazeem Opeyemi
- Issue Date
- Dec-2025
- Publisher
- 농업과학연구소
- Keywords
- crop production; energy efficiency; scalability challenges; sustainability; yield; improvement
- Citation
- Korean Journal of Agricultural Science, v.52, no.4, pp 619 - 638
- Pages
- 20
- Indexed
- KCI
- Journal Title
- Korean Journal of Agricultural Science
- Volume
- 52
- Number
- 4
- Start Page
- 619
- End Page
- 638
- URI
- https://scholarworks.gnu.ac.kr/handle/sw.gnu/81583
- DOI
- 10.7744/kjoas.520418
- ISSN
- 2466-2402
2466-2410
- Abstract
- Vertical farming or vertical growing systems, a subset of controlled environment agriculture (CEA), integrates smart and precision agriculture to optimize crop production in stacked environments within a greenhouse, utilizing Internet of Things (IoT) sensors, automation, and advanced lighting. However, vertical farming can be carried out in the open, but the advantages of a closed system are sacrificed. This review examines recent advancements, including precision irrigation (hydroponics, aeroponics, and aquaponics), LED spectral optimization, robotics, and machine learning (ML) for enhanced resource efficiency. Case studies from Singapore, Japan, and the Netherlands demonstrate yield increases of 200 - 300% and energy savings of 30 - 50% compared to traditional methods. By integrating robotics, ML, and IoT, yields can be maximized, resource utilization can be optimized, and environmental impact can be reduced. Case studies from Singapore, Japan, and the Netherlands demonstrate the potential, with kale yields of 300 t·ha-1, strawberry production at 200 t·ha-1, and dual basil fish outputs achieved through 98% water recycling. Challenges such as high costs, energy demands, and technical complexity persist, particularly in developing regions. Future directions propose the integration of renewable energy, can offset energy reliance, cutting costs by 50%, low-cost sensors that broaden access and simplify IoT deployment, and modular designs that enhance scalability and offer hope for adaptation. This manuscript synthesizes quantitative metrics, comparative analyses, and implementation challenges, providing engineers and researchers with a detailed framework to advance sustainable urban agriculture through technology-driven solutions.
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