The researchers also carried out a similar experiment on just lettuce in a four-storied vertical farm, with the same result. Namely, once the test period was over, the team compared the crops in the test group against the control group by counting the number of leaves and measuring the plants’ weight — both freshly harvested and dried. No significant differences were observed.
As for the cost-saving potential, calculations reported in the study show the expenses for artificial lighting can be cut by between 15% and 23%, depending on which mode of compensation by the electric utility is engaged. The lower of the two values corresponds to so-called price-based demand response, and the higher value results from adding contract-based demand response on top of that. The former means taking advantage of hourly electricity rates, and the latter involves an explicit longer-term contract where the farm commits to putting out the lights for a certain amount of time upon request of the utility. For the Russian grid it would yield savings of up to $110 million per year.
Ultimately, lowering the cost of producing vegetables can dampen price growth.
“At its core, our work deals with the unexploited potential synergies between the food industry and the energy system in an urban environment,” study co-author Professor Laurent Gentzbittel of Skoltech Agro commented.
“Such synergies are made possible by the digitalization and decarbonization of the energy system,” said Engineering Center Associate Professor Henni Ouerdane, the principal investigator of the study. “This transformation is a costly endeavor, which does, however, create many opportunities for increasing the efficiency of the generating capacity, bringing down the cost of operation and expansion of the energy system. Demand-side flexibility enables much of those cost-reduction benefits to be allocated to industries such as indoor agriculture, which create that flexibility, transforming their energy-hungriness from a liability to an opportunity.”
According to the researchers, the economic advantage they have demonstrated may prove partially transferable to tomatoes, cucumbers, and — to a lesser extent — to strawberries. Because these plants flower and bear fruit, they undergo additional stages of development for more than half of their life, during which the findings from the leafy greens study may not apply. For some varieties, lighting conditions are critical at and after inflorescence appearance. Developing photo-insensitive day-neutral varieties that will flower regardless of day length may allow benefiting from cost-saving energy-demand flexibility for indoor agriculture for those crops as well.
Besides encompassing more plant varieties, the study could expand by considering ways to economize on heating expenses, too.
The members of the team behind the study see demand response as the future of the power industry. While massive arrays of accumulators, such as the vanadium redox flow batteries developed at Skoltech, will no doubt play a part in evening out the load on the network, demand response strategies of ever-greater sophistication will contribute to the same goal without any massive hardware involved — keeping the network in balance purely by virtue of market forces.