Farmers sign up to run world’s first floating farm in Rotterdam

CONTENT SOURCED FROM DUTCHNEWS

The world’s first floating farm, to be built in Rotterdam, has recruited two dairy farmers and a herd.

Albert Boersen and Myrthe Brabander will be the faces of an experimental Floating Farm and their Montbéliarde cows its moos.

The AD reports on Thursday that the grass is already growing for Dutch floating projects developer Beladon, which plans to build a 1,000 square meter floating platform on the harbour. The aim is to produce 800 litres of milk a day and, potentially, yogurt or Comté-style cheese.

Urban farming

It follows a trend of ‘urban farming’, in which food production is brought back to cities where people live – for example, the UrbanFarmers project cultivating fish and salad greens in an empty Philips office block in The Hague.

Boersen told the AD: ‘People often don’t know where their food comes from, and I’d like to show them close up. But I also want to create awareness among farmers so that they know where their produce goes. My parents sell their milk through [dairy collective] FrieslandCampina so it’s an anonymous project. I think that’s a shame.’

Applying for the job after studying in Leeuwarden, he added he expected his cows to be very curious and sniff around the structure.

Robots

According to Beladon plans, it will be built in concrete, with galvanised steel frames and a membrane floor that lets cow urine soak through; robots will top up food stations and mop up dried cow dung. The cows will also be able to cross to a pasture on real land, which is already growing.

Brabander has experience in cheese making, although the initial plans are to start with pasteurised milk and yogurt. She added to the AD: “Don’t be afraid that the cows will be seasick. They are used to it.’

The project is due to cost more than €2 mln and is financed by private cash. It was inspired after Peter Beladon, chief executive of the developer, visited New York during Hurricane Sandy, saw the disruption to food supply, and decided to build an urban farm. He has previously developed other floating projects.

Minke van Wingerdon, partner at Beladon, told DutchNews.nl: ‘We are very pleased that in addition to our information centre [now built], at the end of the year, we will start construction on the site.’

‘Drool-y and uncertain’

Andrew Cobner, junior vice president of the British Cattle Veterinary Association, told DutchNews.nl that cows might feel the effects of a sea voyage, according to a 2015 article on vehicle motion and animal welfare.

But ‘in a sheltered harbour, it seems unlikely that any effect would be seen.’

However if the cows do feel bad, he said, they would ‘look a bit drool-y and uncertain’.

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