one interesting Dutch technology is Perfotec- they laser drill microscopic 
holes in plastic bags to give just the right balance of CO2, O2, H20 
transpiration to keep the veggies fresh twice or so as long during shipment.  
Nothing like it in the US - yet.  The match the holes with the specific crop 
(machines measure that specific crop's transpiration and match the holes 
exactly for that item) 
 
Date: Sun, 9 Jun 2013 17:14:34 -0400
Subject: Re: [Vo]:Netherlands food exports
From: [email protected]
To: [email protected]

Harry Veeder <[email protected]> wrote: 
That is hard to believe. Perhaps they mean second largest food exporter per 
capita?

No, the second largest in the world. I think measured in dollar value of the 
exports, not food tonnage.
Amazing, isn't it? A little country with 16 million people.
They also export the technology, but that is accounted separately, says NHK.


The website I found says:

"Holland is the world’s 2nd largest exporter of agricultural products, after 
the USA. Together with the USA and France, Holland is one of the top 3 
exporters of vegetables and fruit.

The total value of Dutch agricultural exports was 75.4 billion euros in 2012.
The Dutch agri-food industry contributes 52.5 billion euros of added value to 
Dutch GDP, and accounting for some 20% of Holland's total export value.

The Netherlands is responsible for 22% of the world’s potato exports . . ."

The Dutch experts interviewed on NHK emphasized that this is a high tech, 
computer driven industry. One guy -- a farmer I guess you would call him -- 
gets up at 7 am and drives to an ultramodern office next to his 30-hectare food 
factory. He is sitting in an office looking at computer screens for a while. He 
jokes, "things look good. I guess I can go home." He says he often spends more 
time looking at data than actual crops.

Inside the greenhouse factory the roof is high and everything is metered and 
controlled to a fair-thee-well. It is all hydroponic. The incoming water is 
cleaned, filtered and cleared of bacteria, and then mixed with nutrients and 
iodine. The people picking crops wear haz mat suits and ride on electric cars 
that rise up to the high end of the vines. A robot train of picked crops 
threads its way to the processing building. Pretty soon I expect robots will 
also pick the crops.

- Jed
                                          

Reply via email to