Urban Farming - IELTS Reading Answers & Explanations
From Cambridge IELTS 18 Academic Reading Test 1 · Part 1 · Questions 1–13
Reading Passage
Urban farming
In Paris, urban farmers are trying a soil-free approach to agriculture that uses less space and fewer resources. Could it help cities face the threats to our food supplies?
On top of a striking new exhibition hall in southern Paris, the world’s largest urban rooftop farm has started to bear fruit. Strawberries that are small, intensely flavoured and resplendently red sprout abundantly from large plastic tubes. Peer inside and you see the tubes are completely hollow, the roots of dozens of strawberry plants dangling down inside them. From identical vertical tubes nearby burst row upon row of lettuces; near those are aromatic herbs, such as basil, sage and peppermint. Opposite, in narrow, horizontal trays packed not with soil but with coconut fibre, grow cherry tomatoes, shiny aubergines and brightly coloured chards.
Pascal Hardy, an engineer and sustainable development consultant, began experimenting with vertical farming and aeroponic growing towers- as the soil-free plastic tubes are known – on his Paris apartment block roof five years ago. The urban rooftop space above the exhibition hall is somewhat bigger: 14,000 square metres and almost exactly the size of a couple of football pitches. Already, the team of young urban farmers who tend it have picked, in one day, 3,000 lettuces and 150 punnets of strawberries. When the remaining two thirds of the vast open area are in production, 20 staff will harvest up to 1,000 kg of perhaps 35 different varieties of fruit and vegetables, every day. ‘We’re not ever, obviously, going to feed the whole city this way,’ cautions Hardy. ‘In the urban environment you’re working with very significant practical constraints, clearly, on what you can do and where. But if enough unused space can be developed like this, there’s no reason why you shouldn’t eventually target maybe between 5% and 10% of consumption.’
Perhaps most significantly, however, this is a real-life showcase for the work of Hardy’s flourishing urban agriculture consultancy, Agripolis, which is currently fielding enquiries from around the world to design, build and equip a new breed of soil-free inner-city farm. ‘The method’s advantages are many,’ he says. ‘First, I don’t much like the fact that most of the fruit and vegetables we eat have been treated with something like 17 different pesticides, or that the intensive farming techniques that produced them are such huge generators of greenhouse gases. I don’t much like the fact, either, that they’ve travelled an average of 2,000 refrigerated kilometres to my plate, that their quality is so poor, because the varieties are selected for their capacity to withstand such substantial journeys, or that 80% of the price I pay goes to wholesalers and transport companies, not the producers.’
Produce grown using this soil-free method, on the other hand- which relies solely on a small quantity of water, enriched with organic nutrients, pumped around a closed circuit of pipes, towers and trays- is ‘produced up here, and sold locally, just down there. It barely travels at all,’ Hardy says. ‘You can select crop varieties for their flavour, not their resistance to the transport and storage chain, and you can pick them when they’re really at their best, and not before.’ No soil is exhausted, and the water that gently showers the plants’ roots every 12 minutes is recycled, so the method uses 90% less water than a classic intensive farm for the same yield.
Urban farming is not, of course, a new phenomenon. Inner-city agriculture is booming from Shanghai to Detroit and Tokyo to Bangkok. Strawberries are being grown in disused shipping containers, mushrooms in underground carparks. Aeroponic farming, he says, is ‘virtuous’. The equipment weighs little, can be installed on almost any flat surface and is cheap to buy: roughly €100 to €150 per square metre. It is cheap to run, too, consuming a tiny fraction of the electricity used by some techniques.
Produce grown this way typically sells at prices that, while generally higher than those of classic intensive agriculture, are lower than soil-based organic growers. There are limits to what farmers can grow this way, of course, and much of the produce is suited to the summer months. ‘Root vegetables we cannot do, at least not yet,’ he says. ‘Radishes are OK, but carrots, potatoes, that kind of thing- the roots are simply too long. Fruit trees are obviously not an option. And beans tend to take up a lot of space for not much return.’ Nevertheless, urban farming of the kind being practised in Paris is one part of a bigger and fast-changing picture that is bringing food production closer to our lives.
Questions
Questions 1–3 Sentence Completion
Complete the sentences below.
Choose NO MORE THAN TWO WORDS ANDIOR A NUMBER from the passage for each answer.
Write your answers in boxes on your answer sheet.
Urban farming in Paris
- Vertical tubes are used to grow strawberries, 1 and herbs.
- There will eventually be a daily harvest of as much as 2 in weight of fruit and vegetables.
- It may be possible that the farm’s produce will account for as much as 10% of the city’s 3 overall.
Questions 4–7 Table Completion
Complete the table below.
Choose ONE WORD ONLY from the passage for each answer.
Write your answers in boxes on your answer sheet.
|
Intensive farming versus aeroponic urban farming |
|||
|
|
Growth | Selection | Sale |
| Intensive farming |
|
|
|
| Aeroponic urban farming |
|
|
|
Questions 8–13 True / False / Not Given
Do the following statements agree with the information given in the Reading Passage?
In boxes on your answer sheet, write
TRUE if the statement agrees with the information
FALSE if the statement contradicts the information
NOT GIVEN if there is no information on this
Answers & Explanations Summary
| # | Answer | Evidence | Explanation |
|---|---|---|---|
| Q1 | lettuces | From identical vertical tubes nearby burst row upon row of lettuces; near those are aromatic herbs, such as basil, sage and peppermint. | Excerpt/Passage Explanation: The passage describes how lettuces are grown in vertical tubes alongside aromatic herbs like basil, sage, and peppermint. Answer Explanation: The answer refers to a type of vegetable that is being grown in the vertical tubes. Reason For Correctness: The answer is correct because the excerpt specifically mentions lettuces being grown in the vertical tubes, making it a suitable answer choice from the passage provided. |
| Q2 | 1,000 kg / 1000 kg | When the remaining two thirds of the vast open area are in production, 20 staff will harvest up to 1,000 kg of perhaps 35 different varieties of fruit and vegetables, every day. | Excerpt/Passage Explanation: The passage describes a farm where 20 workers will gather around 1,000 kilograms of different fruits and vegetables daily when the entire area is being used for farming. Answer Explanation: The answer indicates that the daily harvest weight of fruit and vegetables in the farm could reach up to 1,000 kilograms. Reason For Correctness: The correct answer matches the information provided in the excerpt, specifically mentioning the weight of 1,000 kg as the potential daily harvest of fruits and vegetables on the farm. |
| Q3 | consumption / food consumption | ‘We’re not ever, obviously, going to feed the whole city this way,’ cautions Hardy. ‘In the urban environment you’re working with very significant practical constraints, clearly, on what you can do and where. But if enough unused space can be developed like this, there’s no reason why you shouldn’t eventually target maybe between 5% and 10% of consumption.’ | Excerpt/Passage Explanation: The passage suggests that urban farming projects like the one in Paris may aim to eventually supply around 5% to 10% of the food consumed by the city. Answer Explanation: The answer refers to the total amount of food that people in the city eat. Reason For Correctness: The correct answer 'food consumption' is accurate because it directly relates to the amount of food consumed by the city, as indicated in the excerpt where it mentions targeting 5% to 10% of consumption with urban farming projects like the one in Paris. |
| Q4 | pesticides | First, I don’t much like the fact that most of the fruit and vegetables we eat have been treated with something like 17 different pesticides | Excerpt/Passage Explanation: The passage talks about how many fruits and vegetables we consume are treated with many chemicals used to kill pests or insects that harm plants. Answer Explanation: The answer refers to chemicals used to kill pests that are found on plants. Reason For Correctness: The correct answer 'pesticides' fits in the context as it reflects the concerns about chemicals (pesticides) being used on fruits and vegetables mentioned in the excerpt. Pesticides are substances specifically used to eliminate or control pests like insects and other harmful organisms that could damage crops. |
| Q5 | journeys | because the varieties are selected for their capacity to withstand such substantial journeys | Excerpt/Passage Explanation: The passage talks about how certain varieties of produce are chosen because they can withstand long journeys. Answer Explanation: The answer 'journeys' refers to the long travels that the selected produce can endure. Reason For Correctness: The correct answer is 'journeys' because it accurately reflects the idea that the produce varieties are chosen based on their ability to survive long journeys, as mentioned in the excerpt. |
| Q6 | producers | 80% of the price I pay goes to wholesalers and transport companies, not the producers | Excerpt/Passage Explanation: The passage is saying that a large portion (80%) of the price paid for products does not go to the people who produce those products. Answer Explanation: The answer refers to the people who grow or make the products being sold. Reason For Correctness: The correct answer 'producers' is supported by the excerpt as it mentions that most of the money paid for the products does not reach the producers themselves, indicating that they receive very little of the income generated by the sale of their products. |
| Q7 | flavour / flavor | You can select crop varieties for their flavour, not their resistance to the transport and storage chain | Excerpt/Passage Explanation: The passage suggests that in aeroponic urban farming, crops are chosen based on their taste or how they taste, instead of being chosen based on how well they can endure being transported and stored. Answer Explanation: The answer refers to the quality of taste of the produce being one of the main selection criteria in aeroponic urban farming. Reason For Correctness: The correct answer is 'flavour' because it directly relates to the idea presented in the excerpt that crops are selected for their taste rather than other factors like durability during transportation and storage. |
| Q8 | TRUE | Strawberries are being grown in disused shipping containers, mushrooms in underground carparks | Excerpt/Passage Explanation: The passage is saying that strawberries are being grown inside disused shipping containers, and mushrooms are being grown in underground carparks. Answer Explanation: The answer indicates that urban farming can take place above or below ground. Reason For Correctness: The correct answer is TRUE because the excerpt specifically mentions mushrooms being grown underground, which aligns with the idea that urban farming can take place below ground, supporting the statement in the question. |
| Q9 | NOT GIVEN | The equipment weighs little, can be installed on almost any flat surface and is cheap to buy: roughly €100 to €150 per square metre | Excerpt/Passage Explanation: The passage talks about the equipment used in aeroponic farming being lightweight, easy to install on flat surfaces, and inexpensive, costing around €100 to €150 per square meter. Answer Explanation: The answer indicates that there is no information provided in the excerpt regarding whether some of the equipment used in aeroponic farming can be made by hand. Reason For Correctness: The correct answer is 'NOT GIVEN' because the excerpt does not mention anything about whether the equipment used in aeroponic farming can be handmade. Therefore, since this information is not given, the answer 'NOT GIVEN' is appropriate. |
| Q10 | FALSE | It is cheap to run, too, consuming a tiny fraction of the electricity used by some techniques | Excerpt/Passage Explanation: The passage mentions that urban farming is cheap to run and consumes very little electricity compared to some other techniques. Answer Explanation: The answer is stating that urban farming does not rely more on electricity than some other types of farming. Reason For Correctness: The correct answer is FALSE because the passage clearly states that urban farming consumes only a tiny fraction of the electricity used by some techniques, indicating that urban farming relies less on electricity than those other techniques. |
| Q11 | TRUE | Produce grown this way typically sells at prices that, while generally higher than those of classic intensive agriculture, are lower than soil-based organic growers | Excerpt/Passage Explanation: The passage explains that produce grown using aeroponic farming methods is generally more expensive than produce from traditional farming but is cheaper than organic produce grown in soil. Answer Explanation: The answer states that fruit and vegetables grown on an aeroponic urban farm are cheaper than traditionally grown organic produce. Reason For Correctness: The correct answer is TRUE because the excerpt clearly mentions that the prices of aeroponically grown produce are lower than those of soil-based organic growers. This directly supports the idea that aeroponic produce is cheaper than traditionally grown organic produce. |
| Q12 | FALSE | There are limits to what farmers can grow this way, of course, and much of the produce is suited to the summer months | Excerpt/Passage Explanation: The passage is saying that there are limits to what can be grown in an aeroponic urban farm, and most of the produce is suitable for the summer months. Answer Explanation: The answer indicates that it is FALSE that most produce can be grown on an aeroponic urban farm at any time of the year. Reason For Correctness: The correct answer is FALSE because the passage specifically mentions that the produce grown in this way is suited to the summer months, implying that not all produce can be grown at any time of the year. |
| Q13 | NOT GIVEN | And beans tend to take up a lot of space for not much return | Excerpt/Passage Explanation: The passage says that beans need a lot of space but may not give a good reward. Answer Explanation: The answer indicates that there is no information provided regarding whether beans take longer to grow on an urban farm than other vegetables. Reason For Correctness: The correct answer 'NOT GIVEN' is accurate because the passage does not specify whether beans take longer to grow compared to other vegetables, so it is not possible to determine if the statement is true or false based on the information provided. |
