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Al-Badia market garden farm produces an array of vegetable crops in multi-storey format, carefully controlling light and irrigation as well as recycling 90 percent of the water it uses |
An ultra-modern vertical farm in the middle of the
desert stands as a testament to Dubai's determination to spark a "green
revolution" to overcome its dependence on food imports.
Al-Badia market garden farm produces an array of
vegetable crops in multi-storey format, carefully controlling light and
irrigation as well as recycling 90 percent of the water it uses.
"It's a green revolution in the middle of the
desert," the farm's director Basel Jammal tells AFP.
"Each plant is given the amount of light,
humidity, heat and water it needs. It's as if it were a guest in a five-star
hotel," he says.
The COVID-19 pandemic, which disrupted global supply
chains, has refocused attention on food security in the United Arab Emirates.
The UAE is rich in oil and ingenuity, but has little
arable land and endures dry, baking summers.
That was not an issue decades ago when the area was
sparsely inhabited by Bedouins.
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The UAE's need to address its over-reliance on imports
has inspired other
strategies, including stockpiling and high-tech agriculture
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But the wealth generated by oil discoveries since the
1970s sent expatriates flocking to the UAE.
Dubai now has more than 3.3 million inhabitants of 200
nationalities, relies largely on expensive desalinated water, and its food needs
have grown and diversified.
'Choices for the future'
Dubai, like the other six emirates that make up the
UAE, is heavily dependent on imports, which make up 90 percent of its food
needs according to official statistics.
Produce arrives from all over the world by air and at
Dubai's state-of-the-art port, stocking supermarkets with a range that compares
favourably to those of any Western capital.
But in a region where geopolitical tensions with
nearby Iran frequently threaten to boil over, long-term food security and
self-sufficiency are key goals.
More than a decade ago, the UAE began buying or
leasing agricultural land abroad, mainly in east Africa, to lock in supply even
in times of crisis.
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Abdellatif al-Banna is an independent farmer joining
the innovation drive,
growing pineapples in greenhouses using hydroponics and
selling his production
via an internet platform
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Problems on the ground including political instability
led it to look towards Australia and Eastern Europe.
But the need to address its over-reliance on imports
has inspired other strategies including stockpiling and high-tech agriculture.
Jammal says his model farm where everything is
controlled by computers, is a "choice for the future".
"We no longer want to depend on imports. We want
to produce locally, all year round, without worrying about climate change,
rainfall or drought," he says.
Like Al-Badia, a number of farms are springing up in
Dubai and less-developed areas like Al-Ain and the mountainous emirate of Ras
al-Khaimah.
Abdellatif al-Banna is another independent farmer
joining the innovation drive, growing pineapples in greenhouses using
hydroponics -- without soil -- and selling his production via an internet
platform.
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Not far from Dubai's coastline and glitzy skyscrapers,
several farms raise cows
in air-conditioned sheds that help provide the local
market with dairy products
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At his farm in Al-Awir, Banna also experiments with
growing fruits, vegetables and even wheat in the cooler months -- producing
enough grain for his family in what he hopes is a prototype.
Elsewhere, not far from Dubai's coastline and glitzy
skyscrapers, several farms raise cows in air-conditioned sheds that help
provide the local market with dairy products.
And in vast tanks overseen by a control room that
duplicates Norway's sunrises and sunsets, salmon are being farmed in tanks,
despite searing heat outside.
Free of shortages
Such farms are often private ventures but are actively
encouraged by Emirati authorities, said Omar Bouchehab, who chairs Dubai's Food
Security Committee.
Authorities have launched a plan to raise domestic
agricultural production by 15 percent by 2021 and boost the use of agricultural
technologies, he said.
At the beginning of the coronavirus crisis, while many developed cities saw shelves stripped of pasta, tinned goods and toilet rolls, Dubai did not experience any shortages in fresh produce or staples.
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A fruit and vegetable warehouse is seen in Dubai
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At the beginning of the coronavirus crisis, while many developed cities saw shelves stripped of pasta, tinned goods and toilet rolls, Dubai did not experience any shortages in fresh produce or staples.
Thanks to airborne cargo services via giant carrier
Emirates, which repurposed passenger seats to boost capacity, Dubai was even
able to ensure the re-export of various food products to its neighbours.
At the Fresh Market, a large wholesale enterprise,
workers busily transported and stored tonnes of imported fresh food. Executive
director Redha al-Mansouri was upbeat about the emirate's food security.
"Dubai has an adequate infrastructure and a stock
capable of meeting the needs of the United Arab Emirates, and even the needs of
neighbouring countries," he said.
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