The Future Farming brand and its unique advanced aquaponics technology are beginning to reach beyond the Czech Republic. A week after GreenTech Amsterdam, film makers from a British Government advisory group and UNESCO arrived to film Future Farming technologies.
The Future Farming brand and its unique advanced aquaponics technology are beginning to reach beyond the Czech Republic. A week after GreenTech Amsterdam, film makers from a British Government advisory group and UNESCO arrived to film Future Farming technologies.
The film makers flew from London straight to Brno. “The UN has recently announced that the world population has reached 8 billion and this population growth is expected to increase exponentially till 2050,” said Richard Golbourne, creative director of SJH Group, explaining the interest in Future Farming. “Our documentary focuses on the infrastructure in the cities of the future. We ask ourselves what makes a smart city and how smart city infrastructure can improve human lives in the future. We visited Future Farming to find an answer to the question of how far in the future we have to go to see this farming method feeding a whole city,” said Richard Golbourne.
The film is scheduled to premiere in September and is expected to be shared with a broad international audience of engineers and the general public thanks to cooperation with UNESCO. The documentary has been commissioned by the ICE for the UNESCO World Engineering Day for Sustainable Development. The Institution of Civil Engineers in London is a major British organisation with 200-year history of advising the British Government and other important institutions on how to build more sustainable infrastructure. UNESCO is a UN organisation for education, science, and culture based in Paris. The organisation was founded in 1945 and currently has branches in 53 countries around the world.