View from the top of the "Chamber of Mines" building in the central business district of Johannesburg, South Africa, Nov. 15, 2017. |
Today, it is also the site of a new venture aiming to entice the city's unemployed youth into green entrepreneurship.
The action this time is happening not underground but sprouting from the rooftops of the inner city's iconic skyscrapers.
The initiative to
create urban gardening businesses on vacant roofs was launched more than
a year and a half ago by the public-private Johannesburg Inner City
Partnership.
Farming is hardly
the first thing that comes to mind as a source of job creation and
entrepreneurship, said Brendon Martens of Wouldn't It Be Cool (WIBC), an
innovation incubator leading the effort.
"Agriculture is
generally seen as a low-tech, bottom of the pyramid-type activity when
it's at the small scale. It's what a single mom does just to make ends
meet," he told the Thomson Reuters Foundation.
But Martens and his
team are striving to turn the concept on its head by bringing market
needs together with cutting-edge farming methods and hands-on business
training.
HI-TECH VEGGIES
The initiative uses
hydroponics technology, which allows basil, lettuces, spring onions and
other crops to be grown in special water solutions without requiring
soil or large open spaces.
Here plants grow
faster and use up to 80 percent less water than in traditional farming.
The technique also eliminates problems like soil erosion.
Another advantage
is that crops are grown locally, cutting down on transportation time and
costs, and delivering the freshest-possible products to the consumer.
That is a big shift
given as much as 80 percent of what is on offer at the Johannesburg
fresh produce market, Africa's largest, is imported from outside Gauteng
province, said Martens.
"We pull that value into the communities in the inner city that really need it," he said.The farm atop the
Chamber of Mines, where neat rows of plants bloom under plastic high
above the traffic buzzing below, began operating in September.
It is already generating a profit, said Nhlanhla Mpati, 29, the "agripreneur" - agricultural entrepreneur - in charge.
Skills learned here can be applied in other places too, he said, inspecting a small pot of lush green basil.
"With
hydro-technology, you're not just employing people, you're giving them a
specific trade and a specific skill. They take that and use it
somewhere else," he said.
In the next three
years, about 100 more farms will be set up in the city besides the two
now running, and the scheme is already attracting many applications from
would-be young entrepreneurs.Those shortlisted will receive business and technology training.
Ten of the best
performers will each be allocated a rooftop farm of at least 100 square
metres (1,076 square feet) with about 3,600 plants.
The farmer will pay back a percentage of the total turnover, which will be used to fund the next farm.
Building owners are asked not to charge rent for the first year, but after that they can earn an income from their roof.
"You're creating a
perpetual cycle of sustainability. The farmer's sustainable, the project
is sustainable - until we run out of buildings," said Martens.
"TICKING TIME BOMB"
One of the initiative's main aims is to address the problem of mass youth unemployment in the city and beyond.
South Africa's
jobless rate is close to 30 percent, but that rises to nearly 40 percent
for those aged between 15 and 34, one of the highest percentages in the
world.
In Johannesburg,
young people beg for money as they weave between cars in traffic jams.
Unemployment is also fuelling high crime rates, with some zones virtual
no-go areas after dark.
"It's a ticking time bomb," said Martens. "We need to address that issue in a sustainable way."
Rising poverty in
South Africa is also a major concern, said Moroka Mokgoko who works in
business development for Rooftop Roots, an urban eco-farming enterprise
setting up rooftop gardens in inner-city Johannesburg.
"Hunger is a real
issue here," he said. "The legacy of apartheid and its effects are still
felt today... You have kids struggling to afford school."
Mokgoko seeks to sell rooftop produce at affordable rates to locals who might otherwise not be able to buy fresh food.
City roof gardening "kills two birds with one stone - you provide food security and you provide jobs for people", he said.
MORE THAN FOOD?
Some experts, however, doubt the potential of urban farming beyond meeting immediate hand-to-mouth needs.
Most farmers do not
have enough support, land, technology or capital to reduce poverty on a
large scale, said Naudé Malan, an expert on urban agriculture at the
University of Johannesburg.
But urban gardens
using hydroponics and aquaponics, and run with entrepreneurial vision do
very well, generating an income that beats the median wage, he added.
The key to success lies in the shorter and more efficient production and distribution process, he said.
Growing crops in
the city cuts down on food miles - the distance food is transported from
producer to consumer - and fosters a new retail approach, linking
farmers and shoppers directly, Malan said.
Being close to market avoids planet-warming emissions from long transportation, WIBC's Martens added.
And hydroponics
requires far less water than normal irrigation - important in a country
that suffers from chronic water shortages.
Tending his plants
on the Chamber of Mines, Mpati said the rooftop business is ripe for
expansion - from using urban gardens for fashion shows and art
exhibitions, to tourist trails.
"It's about being
innovative and disruptive in the space," he said. "That's why I say that
within five years (the farmers) should be millionaires."
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