First Farm Run Entirely by Robots to Open in Japan
The fully automated indoor farm will produce 30,000 heads of lettuce per day.

Japanese agricultural company SPREAD is constructing the world's first farm manned entirely by robots. The indoor, vertical, and LED-lit endeavor in Kyoto—which SPREAD is calling the Vegetable Factory—will exclusively grow lettuce, with robots able to harvest up to 30,000 heads of lettuce every day.
If you're picturing something straight out of sci-fi, though, not quite: There will be no humanoid robots roaming these faux fields. According to Tech Insider, the robots "look more like conveyor belts with arms." But they will be able to plant seeds, water and trim crops, and harvest the heads of lettuce when they're ready without the aid of any human beings.
SPREAD's current indoor farm produces 21,000 heads of lettuce per day, but it's still staffed by some of us. For its "next-generation Vegetable Factory," SPREAD is focusing on sustainability and keeping costs low with "full automation from seeding to harvest and the optimization of the energy used for the lighting and air conditioning."
The company projects a labor-cost reduction of 50 percent and 30 percent less energy usage, and will recycle 98 percent of the water needed to grow the crops.
SPREAD sells its lettuce—which is higher in beta-carotene than conventional lettuce—under the brand name Vegetus. The company will open the fully-automated plant in 2017 and aims to scale up to 500,000 heads of lettuce per day within five years, franchising out its robotic plant-factory system in Japan and internationally.
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manned entirely by robots
EXCUSE ME?!
Sorry, "Manned entirely by synthetic persons"
Well, I was looking for "manned entirely *with* robots", but that's better.
Should a facility in which robots do all the work even be called "manned"?
Stop Othering Them!
There are fembots in there, surely. The farmbots would need something to manufacture them dinner at the end of a hard day and to pop out young'unbots.
Wait, it's manned by Synths. Let me go get my Fat Man.
I still have yet to find a vantage point from which I can fire the MIRV without destroying myself in the blast.
Face it, the trebuchet 1st stage will never work.
Uh oh, ENB. Does Bailey know you're creepin' on his turf?
She specializes in sex and lettuce robots.
Tossing salad?
Yeah, that's why I feel mislead after finding out that SPREAD is just an agricultural company. I am outraged.
You can do a lot of interesting things with fruits and vegetables. I mean, that's what I hear.
If anything, she's creeping on Sullum's turf. This is a classic grow op for lactuca virosa.
"You can sleep in the barn. Just don't be a-touchin' my three beautiful robot daughters."
So you're saying the robot sheep are fair game?
That depends, are you an android? And, do you dream of said electric sheep?
The set-up and punch line were perfect.
Fry: Oh, Bender. You didn't touch the Crushinator, did you?
Bender: Of course not. A lady that fine you gotta romance first.
No Silent Running reference or alt tex? Come on Elizabeth.
"You are NOT using those things in my forest."
I love that movie.
If it is ENTIRELY manned by robots why are there two people clearly working in the freaking picture?!?!?
The new one's not open yet! that's the current one, which still has use for humans
Fair enough!!
Psssst. those ARE the robots.
What's its power level?
Significantly over 9000 it seems.
But they have to be careful. Powerlevel goes too high and suddenly the lettuce turns yellow and bursts into flame
Vegetus. Next they are going to sell cucumbers in brine and call them Pickle-Ohs!
Yeah, but the next thing that happens is that an adventurous young head of lettuce meets a mysterious black head of lettuce who offers him a red pill, and it's all downhill from there.
Sugoi desu ne
tsugoi mo
The company projects a labor-cost reduction of 50 percent and 30 percent less energy usage, and will recycle 98 percent of the water needed to grow the crops.
Most people (those people) will not read past the bolded part before declaring it evil.
I do not believe this. Lettuce is made up of water and cellulose.
I assume it means that 98% of the water that drains off will be recycled.
Chipotle will still find a way to contaminate the robot lettuce.
People who put lettuce in a burrito get what they deserve.
Indeed they do.
Exactly Hugh. Restaurants that plate their sour cream or guac on shredded lettuce are the worst. I ordered potato skins. Why is there lettuce on my plate?
Fertilize with used robot motor oil?
For some reason, the notion of converting electricity into light to grow plants indoors just seems so damn inefficient. I suppose there are upsides in that you can supply light 24/7 and better control the environment.
I had one of these, and it was ridiculous how fast my herbs grew.
Another advantage of an indoor facility is that you can crank up the CO2 levels to what the plants actually like instead of waiting for fossil fuels to provide the increase.
Also, no fucking squash bugs.
It's a much more efficient use of space since you can stack to the rafters per the picture. One acre of ground space can grow 15 acres of plants.
Fact: thirty thousand heads of lettuce is enough lettuce to feed thirty thousands people a head of lettuce or one person thirty thousand heads of lettuce.
Ok, that math checks out...
What about my family of 2.5 persons?
I want to do this with cannabis.
Robot farms, automated burger joints, driverless cars, Uber-copters, Amazon drones, . . .
You can pray for Jesus, but Skynet is coming.
Not if we just mandate a higher minimum wage!!!!
A LIVING WAGE!!!
The solution to that is simple, kill John Connor. In T3 we learn that the female Terminator downloads Skynet into the system. If Connor dies before he sends Reese back to save his mother then Skynet never exists. In fact Skynet trying to kill Sarah Connor was really dumb since it would have caused it to never exist! My head hurts.
Strangely, I was thinking a much of this can be used for my survivalist farm.
I'm making $86 an hour working from home. I was shocked when my neighbour told me she was averaging $95 but I see how it works now. I feel so much freedom now that I'm my own boss. This is what I do,
--------------------- http://www.richi8.com
Do you work for Skynet?
Are you Skynet?
Lettuce use our heads to figure this one out.
Yes, if we put our heads together we cannot be beet!
Just think no more migrant workers those evil people, I can see it now In America we will be required to hand pick.
Jobs created or saved!
Will the lights be solar powered, though?
For a system like this were you will have consistent power needs 24/7 year round I can see solar panels on the roof being a good idea for cost mitigation. I'm not sure if solar is advanced enough to actually provide a cheaper kilowatt when it is producing than buying from whatever the electric company decided was cheapest, though. It'd be worth investigating, but I wouldn't put it on the brochure until I'd actually proven to myself (run my own numbers instead of taking the salesman at face value) that it would provide more in savings than it cost to install, run, and maintain.
Everyone else who's run those numbers honestly concluded that they're not economically viable anywhere where there are power mains unless there's some subsidy making other people pay part of the up-front costs.
This is a special case, though. Most often solar isn't economical because when you need power doesn't match up to when it is actually providing power. In this situation you always need power, so you can accept the solar provided when it's producing and pull off the grid when it's not. You don't have the lost value that normally comes with solar. It still might not be economical, but it is worth a look.
Most often solar isn't economical because when you need power doesn't match up to when it is actually providing power.
Peak load has traditionally been during the middle of the day (on weekdays). I think you're overestimating the impact of residential versus commercial/industrial loads. Solar's actually great in that regard, but it's a bit unreliable, especially if it's all concentrated in the same area. The bulk electric system was not really designed to accommodate a scenario where a sizable percentage of power plants are turned off every time there is a passing cloud.
It's a joke, son.
It's ironic!
This is pretty cool. I can't wait until they get it perfected enough that we can start growing all the fresh veggies we need in a year in our basement. Economies of scale will make it cheaper to buy at the store most likely, but the idea of a completely automated food system that can be owned by the individual has a serious appeal to my separatist streak.
I'm still waiting on my completely automated basement nuclear power generator.
Me, too.
I'd crank my A/C up to 11 in the summer if I had one?
Yeah, I was thinking the same thing. As this and minifacturing continue advance, life as a survivalist is going to be easier and easier.
I, for one, welcome our new robot underlings.
Wake me up when it is a Brothel entirely errr womaned by robots
If you're picturing something straight out of sci-fi, though, not quite: There will be no humanoid robots roaming these faux fields. According to Tech Insider, the robots "look more like conveyor belts with arms."
So no hot anime bots roaming the fields? I am disappoint.
This just confirmed, there will be no good country music ever again.
Wait... you think there was good country music before?
Well, Waylon, Merle, Willie, Jones...
But without the farm, what really is there?
Server farm, son.
There's still momma, trains, trucks, prison, and gettin' drunk.
I wonder if Deepak's gut biome can tell this lettuce wasn't grown in the earth...
Did anyone else read this as:
"But they will be able to plant seeds, water and trim crops, and harvest the heads of human beings when they're ready without the aid of any lettuce."
Needs product labeling. I am sure robot grown organisms are bad somehow.
We need RGO labelling!
While the Plowman neer at hand,
Whistles ore the Furrow'd Land,
And the Milkmaid singeth blithe,
And the Mower whets his sithe,
And every Shepherd tells his tale
Under the Hawthorn in the dale....
Hard by, a Cottage chimney smokes,
From betwixt two aged Okes,
Where Corydon and Thyrsis met,
Are at their savory dinner set
Of Hearbs, and other Country Messes,
Which the neat-handed Phillis dresses;
And then in haste her Bowre she leaves,
With Thestylis to bind the Sheaves;
Or if the earlier season lead
To the tann'd Haycock in the Mead,
Som times with secure delight
The up-land Hamlets will invite,
When the merry Bells ring round,
And the jocond rebecks sound
To many a youth, and many a maid,
Dancing in the Chequer'd shade;
And young and old com forth to play
On a Sunshine Holyday...
Through the ample open door of the peaceful country barn,
A sun-lit pasture field, with cattle and horses feeding;
And haze, and vista, and the far horizon, fading away.
I'm gonna live where the green grass grows
Watchin' my corn pop up in rows
Every night be tucked in close to you
Raise our kids where the good Lord's blessed
Point our rocking chairs towards the west
Plant our dreams where the peaceful river flows
Where the green grass grows
Wait, I think there's got to be an American Robotic painting somewhere on the Internet...let me check...
Surprise, surprise