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by capitainenemo
1455 days ago
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Only if you start from solar panels. Yeast and green algae could be grown from anything that produces electricity at that point (geothermal, nuclear). I'm guessing the complexity and costs don't warrant using it on Earth, thus the suggestion of use on Mars. Also. From the article. "The potential for employing this technology to grow crop plants was also investigated. Cowpea, tomato, tobacco, rice, canola, and green pea were all able to utilize carbon from acetate when cultivated in the dark. 'We found that a wide range of crops could take the acetate we provided and build it into the major molecular building blocks an organism needs to grow and thrive.'" … "“Imagine someday giant vessels growing tomato plants in the dark and on Mars—how much easier would that be for future Martians?”" |
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I imagined energy would not be the main bottleneck to growing food on a different planet.