How to Grow Strawberries Indoors? Vertical Farm Expands From Greens to Berries - Bloomberg

2022-06-30 07:09:47 By : Ms. Susan Kong

Anchored by Anna Edwards and Mark Cudmore, Bloomberg Markets Europe is a fast-paced hour of news and analysis, building towards the drama and excitement of the start of the cash trade across the continent.

Overnight on Wall Street is morning in Europe. Bloomberg Daybreak Europe, anchored live from London, tracks breaking news in Europe and around the world. Markets never sleep, and neither does Bloomberg News. Monitor your investments 24 hours a day, around the clock from around the globe.

Topping Out transports us to one of the premier ice climbing comeptitions in the world.

UK Real Household Incomes Fall for an Unprecedented 4th Quarter

UK Housing Market Sees Signs of a Slowdown After BOE Rate Hikes

Chinese Professor Loses $2.3 Billion After SenseTime Slumps

Samsung Is First to Start Mass Production of 3-Nanometer Chips

FCC Official Wants App Stores to Cancel TikTok. That’s Unlikely

How Duterte’s Time in Power Shook Up the Philippines

Nuclear Envoys Make Little Progress in Doha Talks: Iran Snapshot

Citigroup’s Family Office Clients Are Seizing on the Market’s Wild Swings

Crypto Tax Cheats Likely to Get Relief as US Crackdown Hits Snag

Where to Drink and Eat in Kent, the UK’s Destination Wine Region

Brexit Is Making It Harder for UK Suppliers to Get Good Caviar

Markets Are Signaling a Pyrrhic Inflation Victory

Rumors of NATO’s Brain Death Were Greatly Exaggerated

The World Through Leonardo Del Vecchio’s Ray-Bans

Sports Reporter by Day, Political Revolutionary by Night

Did Razzlekhan and Dutch Pull Off History’s Biggest Crypto Heist?

How Generations of Black Americans Lost Their Land to Tax Liens

BP, Shell to Pay Employee Travel Costs After Abortion Ruling

Kenya’s Lost Girls of Covid Are Fighting to Regain Ground 

WHO Says US Supreme Court Ruling Overturning Roe Bucks 40-Year Global Trend

Gabon Plans World’s Biggest Ever Issuance of Carbon Credits

Australia Bets on Clean Power to Avoid Another Market Failure

Cities Stung by Great Resignation Hike Wages, Just as Recession Looms

Why Local Officials Are Facing Growing Harassment and Threats

The Office Tower Has a New Job to Do

Deutsche Bank Sees Bitcoin Returning to $28,000 by Year-End

More Crypto ‘Meltdowns’ to Come Thanks to Fed Mistakes, Pantera’s Morehead Says

Flows of Ether Offshoot Reveal Terra’s Ripple Effect on Crypto

After success with salad greens and herbs, Bowery Farming—backed by celebrity chef José Andrés—is tackling the tough-to-grow fruit.

On a cold winter day, chef José Andrés steps into a warehouse in the shadow of Newark airport. After donning a Tyvek suit and hairnet, he passes through a code-protected door and is ushered into a narrow, high-ceilinged room that smells … well … like a strawberry patch on a sunny June day.

The warehouse, in Kearny, N.J., is owned by Bowery Farming Inc., a seven-year-old company that’s grown into the largest vertical farming operation in the U.S. Like most others in the business, Bowery specializes in salad greens and herbs, which require relatively little space and time to grow. But Bowery is adding a splash of crimson to all that green: shiny red strawberries. And Andrés, the founder of World Central Kitchen—a nonprofit that brings food to disaster-stricken communities—as well as an investor in Bowery, has come to sample the crop. “The smell is as good as you can find,” Andrés says after biting into a juicy red berry. “And so is the taste.”