Study shows how urban agriculture can push the sustainability of Phoenix – National Science Foundation

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Phoenix could meet food sustainability goal with 5% of city’s spaces used for agriculture

urban agriculture

Urban agriculture can help Phoenix and other cities meet sustainability goals.

October 4, 2019

A community garden occupies a diminutive dirt lot in Phoenix. Rows of raised garden beds offer up basil, watermelons and corn, making this patch of land an agricultural oasis in a desert city of 1.5 million people. In fact, this garden is contributing in various ways to the environmental sustainability goals set by the city council in 2016.

NSF-funded researchers at Arizona State University and their colleagues assessed how urban agriculture can help Phoenix meet sustainability goals. For example, urban agriculture could help eliminate so-called food deserts, communities that lack retail grocers. It could also provide green space and energy and carbon dioxide emissions savings.

“Our analysis found that, if Phoenix used only about 5% of its urban spaces [2% of its land, and about 10% of its building surfaces] for urban agriculture, the city could meet its sustainability goal concerning local food systems,” said Matei Georgescu, co-author of the study. “Urban agriculture would also contribute toward the city’s goals of increasing open space and reducing environmental impacts from buildings and land use.”

The researchers estimate that nearly 28 square miles (5.4% of city space) are available for urban agriculture in Phoenix. That could supply the city with some 183,000 tons of fresh produce per year, allowing for delivery of an assortment of fruits and vegetables to Phoenix’s existing food deserts. That means the city’s own urban agriculture output could meet 90% of the current annual fresh produce consumed by residents.

The paper, Urban Agriculture’s Bounty: Contributions to Phoenix’s Sustainability Goals, was published in Environmental Research Letters’ Special Issue on Sustainable Cities: Urban Solutions Toward Desired Outcomes.

The research is funded by NSF’s Division of Mathematical Sciences.

—  NSF Public Affairs, (703) 292-7090 media@nsf.gov