The Case of the Spain Greenhouse Corridor: Almería · Murcia · Valencia
Problem Statement
One of the world’s most creative transformations of arid and semi-arid land into productive farmland, the corridor uses abundant sunlight to sustain a massive agricultural engine. Yet this ingenuity rests on tightly interlinked components—40,000+ farms, cooperative logistics, desalination inputs, and THIN-plastic greenhouse structures—that operate as a single, interconnected system rather than isolated parts, which has led to interconnected systemic challenges rather than isolated ones.
The region’s semi-arid climate provides far less water than greenhouse agriculture demands. This forces heavy dependence on desalination, linking water availability directly to energy costs and creating brine disposal pressures.
Substrates like perlite, rockwool, and coco accumulate salts with every irrigation cycle. High-salinity fertilizers worsen buildup, driving growers to over-irrigate to dilute salts—exhausting substrate, depleting aquifers, and accelerating soil abandonment.
Short-lived THIN-film greenhouse plastics degrade rapidly, tear under UV exposure, and require constant replacement. This creates ~30,000 tons of annual waste with no closed-loop recycling, pushing material stress outward into the environment.
Desalination, pumping, climate control, and plastic production all rely on grid electricity. Because the system generates no energy internally, it operates with persistent energy debt and vulnerability to grid volatility.
Growers over-irrigate not because crops need more water, but to dilute accumulating salts in substrate bags and pads. This siloed response to the salt trap unintentionally amplifies other pressures: it depletes aquifers, increases dependence on desalination, raises energy demand, and accelerates salinity cycles. A single compensatory fix magnifies multiple system stresses, illustrating how silo thinking turns local problems into corridor-scale vulnerabilities.
Nutrient runoff—especially nitrogen—reaches the Mar Menor, triggering eutrophication, algae blooms, oxygen crashes, and repeat ecosystem collapses. These failures signal the corridor’s upstream imbalances surfacing downstream.
Energy, water, humidity, substrate, salt, and plastic flows operate independently. With no closed loops connecting them, inefficiencies compound, driving cost, waste, and ecological strain.

