Current:Home > NewsGreenhouses are becoming more popular, but there’s little research on how to protect workers -SummitInvest
Greenhouses are becoming more popular, but there’s little research on how to protect workers
View
Date:2025-04-25 21:10:44
From opposite ends of the world, the uncomfortable conditions Shamim Ahamed and Purvi Tiwari experienced doing separate Ph.D. research inside greenhouses inspired them to study the heat in the indoor structures.
Tiwari, a researcher at Indira Gandhi Agricultural University in India, realized the heat-amplifying effect of greenhouses is a big concern that should be studied because she herself experienced the leg cramps, nausea and dizziness that her farmer subjects later described. Summer outdoor temperatures can reach 120 degrees Fahrenheit (50 degrees Celsius) in parts of India, where greenhouse workers “are feeling suffocated inside.” She added that in the last five years, greenhouses have become a trend as available land shrinks amid development.
“Workplaces shouldn’t harm humans,” she said. “If that workplace area is harming that person, that means it’s not good for working. That should be changed.”
In the United States, the latest agricultural census shows the number of greenhouse and nursery workers in the U.S. has grown by 16,000 in recent years. But there are no federal heat rules even as greenhouses become more popular and the number of workers in them has risen. There is also minimal research on the experiences of workers and their broader working conditions, nor on how to protect people who labor inside their often hot and humid environments. But academics from across the world, like Tiwari and Ahamed, are trying to plug the knowledge gaps about the unique conditions greenhouse farmworkers are exposed to.
Bharat Jayram Venkat, associate professor and founding director of UCLA’s Heat Lab, said that “there’s a lot of research on agricultural workers... but not specifically looking at greenhouses.” Most of the literature focuses on maximizing plant growth and production in greenhouses, not on human health.
“On the face of it it makes sense — that’s what greenhouses are actually for. But of course you need human workers in those greenhouses to make them function,” he said, “so you have to think about human health.”
Many farms, from vertical farming startups to traditional crop growers, are marketing greenhouses as a way to shelter crops from climate extremes. But that promise overlooks the experience of the workers inside, where many experience bad conditions (AP Video: Donavan Brutus)
More heat, more greenhouse workers
Last year was the hottest on record and cities across the U.S. repeatedly experienced triple-digit temperatures. According to the United States Department of Agriculture, the number of farms and square feet under glass, and the value of greenhouse and nursery sales, have all increased from 2017. In addition, use of the H-2A agricultural workers program essentially doubled over the period from 2010-2019, with implications for workers’ ability to complain about extreme heat conditions.
Venkat anticipates more research will emerge as indoor, climate-controlled growing environments likely become more popular as climatic conditions become less predictable and more extreme. Laws such as California’s recently-approved indoor heat rules and the rise in greenhouse workers will also increase interest in studying them, he said.
Jennifer Vanos, an associate professor at Arizona State University, has researched the limits of survival and physical work capacity in extreme heat. Using research led by a former fellow at Loughborough University — which assessed how the body functions under varying temperatures, wind speeds, humidity and radiation — Vanos and colleagues studied the productivity of agricultural workers in a warming planet.
A fan hangs above plants growing in a greenhouse at the Core Greenhouse Complex on the University of California, Davis, campus in Davis, Calif., Monday, May 20, 2024. (AP Photo/Jeff Chiu)
Among their findings was that the warmer it gets, the less productive workers could be, which has economic implications. In the context of agriculture, that could mean fewer crops harvested and the need for more workers.
Ultimately, their results found that “for people to work safely, they have to lower their heart rate, which means lower their workout output to be able to do the same tasks in a hotter environment,” said Vanos.
Signs of heat stress include heavy sweating, cramps and fast heart rate. Exposure to extreme temperatures can increase the risk of injuries due to dizziness, weakness or fainting. And heat stroke, the most serious heat-related illness, can happen when the body stops sweating and its temperature rises.
When heat combines with humidity, it’s harder for sweat to evaporate to cool the body, creating a potentially more dangerous situation.
“When the air is already really saturated with water vapor… the capacity for sweat to evaporate is greatly diminished,” said Venkat. “That means that your risk of heat related illness or even death is going to be that much higher.”
Bill Werner, Lead Greenhouse Manager of the College of Agricultural and Environmental Sciences at the University of California, Davis, shows drip irrigation tubes used for plants in a greenhouse at the Core Greenhouse Complex on the campus in Davis, Calif., Monday, May 20, 2024. (AP Photo/Jeff Chiu)
Filling in research gaps
Researchers Tiwari and Ahamed have now published papers on greenhouse environments. Ahamed, now an assistant professor in the Department of Biological and Agricultural Engineering at UC Davis, studied the risks of heat exposure in high-tech greenhouses, comparing the effects on workers when tools like shade “skins” are deployed in greenhouses to keep temperatures cooler. Tiwari spoke to workers in India who experienced nausea, drowsiness and dehydration, and she and her team found that greenhouse workers who labored in the middle of the day had an average working heart rate 20% higher than those in open fields.
Ahamed said Tiwari’s research is relatively rare. Many of the studies that do exist are in countries outside the U.S. And even when studies are U.S.-based, it can be hard to source a proper sample size for greenhouse workers in particular.
For example, researchers at UC Merced found higher rates of preterm birth, low birth weight and birth defects in pregnant agricultural workers across the board – including field and nursery workers. A study from Iran found similar effects in greenhouse workers there, but the UC Merced team said that they didn’t have enough pregnant indoor agriculture workers to confidently look at that result alone.
The holes in the literature, Ahamed said, have led to “a huge gap of how these things could be kind of regulated or standardized.” He thinks there needs to be building codes based upon UV, heat and humidity exposure as well as safety procedures for workers inside.
Geese walk near a greenhouse in Morehead, Ky., formerly operated by AppHarvest, Wednesday, June 5, 2024. AppHarvest employees say they saw colleagues carried out on makeshift stretchers due to heat, and dozens more helped outside on others’ shoulders. (AP Photo/Joshua A. Bickel)
But with such a wide range of greenhouse technology being used – from mega-farms on many acres to microclimates created with “high tunnel” or “hoop house” setups involving plastic arched over small sections of a field – the patchwork of possible options remains an issue toward implementing standards.
However, he thinks it would be doable to have different protocols in place depending on the type of greenhouse at hand.
“For this, they need to investigate, to find some recommendations,” Ahamed said.
___
The Associated Press’ climate and environmental coverage receives financial support from multiple private foundations. AP is solely responsible for all content. Find AP’s standards for working with philanthropies, a list of supporters and funded coverage areas at AP.org.
veryGood! (61)
Related
- DeepSeek: Did a little known Chinese startup cause a 'Sputnik moment' for AI?
- Ellen DeGeneres Says She's Done After Netflix Special
- Nevada's Washoe County votes against certifying recount results of 2 local primaries
- Stephen Baldwin Supports Brother Alec Baldwin at Rust Shooting Trial
- Google unveils a quantum chip. Could it help unlock the universe's deepest secrets?
- Is Mercury in retrograde right now? Here's what the planetary shift means for you.
- People are paying thousands for 'dating boot camp' with sex experts. I signed up.
- A gunman killed at a Yellowstone dining facility earlier told a woman he planned a mass shooting
- Google unveils a quantum chip. Could it help unlock the universe's deepest secrets?
- Flood watch in Vermont as state marks anniversary of last year’s severe inundations
Ranking
- Trump's 'stop
- Ancient relic depicting Moses, Ten Commandments found in Austria, archaeologists say
- Hawaii airport evacuated after grenades found in man's carry-on luggage
- The Supreme Court took powers away from federal regulators. Do California rules offer a backstop?
- Military service academies see drop in reported sexual assaults after alarming surge
- Congressional Democrats meet amid simmering concerns over Biden reelection
- Mike Gundy's DUI comments are insane thing for college football coach to say
- Police find missing Chicago woman's cell phone, journal in Bahamian waters
Recommendation
What do we know about the mysterious drones reported flying over New Jersey?
Jayson Tatum, A'ja Wilson on cover of NBA 2K25; first WNBA player on global edition
U.N. experts say Gaza children dying in Israeli targeted starvation campaign
Jayson Tatum, A'ja Wilson on cover of NBA 2K25; first WNBA player on global edition
'Vanderpump Rules' star DJ James Kennedy arrested on domestic violence charges
Novak Djokovic accuses Wimbledon crowd of disrespect after he says some fans booed him
NATO aims to safeguard commitment to Ukraine amid concern about rising right-wing populism
American mountaineer William Stampfl found mummified 22 years after he vanished in Peru