The 2023 Bankruptcy Wave
In a six-month window between April and September 2023, four of the world's most prominent vertical farming companies filed for bankruptcy. AeroFarms (Newark, NJ). Kalera (Orlando, FL). AppHarvest (Morehead, KY). Infarm (Berlin, Germany). Combined, these four had raised over $1.7 billion in venture capital and public market funding. Combined, they grew lettuce.
They were not alone. 5th Season, a Pittsburgh robotics-focused vertical farm backed by $35 million in funding, shut down abruptly in January 2023. Several smaller operators in Europe and Southeast Asia quietly wound down operations through the same period. The wreckage was not random. It followed a pattern visible in the unit economics from the start.
The vertical farming pitch was seductive: grow food in stacked indoor layers, using 95% less water than field agriculture, achieving 390x yield per acre-equivalent, with no pesticides, no weather risk, and no seasonal constraints. Every claim was technically true. The Association for Vertical Farming and Grand View Research confirmed the numbers. But technical truth and economic viability are different things, and the gap between them turned out to be measured in electricity bills.
This is not a story about technology that does not work. It is a story about technology that works but cannot yet pay for itself growing the wrong crops. The distinction matters for the green transition, because understanding why green projects fail is as important as celebrating the ones that succeed.