Heavy metals are often found in field soils, but, even in tightly controlled greenhouses and vertical farms, these elements can enter the growing space. They do so through substrate materials (coco coir, perlite, and peat), irrigation water, and recycled inputs. Because CEA systems are enclosed, inputs can be closely monitored and controlled.
CEA does not guarantee clean inputs by default. But it does give growers the tools and control they need to find and fix problems that traditional agriculture cannot detect. That distinction matters to the consumers who are paying attention.
Understanding Food Traceability and Input Requirements
Grocery stores have started tightening supplier requirements around traceability and input documentation. Major retailers are increasingly requiring suppliers to document not just what they grow, but how they grow it.
Alongside retailer requirements, the Food Safety Modernization Act (FSMA) adds another layer of pressure. Section 204D specifically focuses on improving traceability and responding quickly to food contamination. There are 24 foods on the Food and Drug Administration’s (FDA) Food Traceability List that requires manufacturers, processors, and packers to keep additional documentation.
Cucumbers, leafy greens, herbs, peppers, tomatoes, and strawberries—all key CEA crops—are included in the rule. For growers, meeting these requirements starts with the inputs themselves.
Here’s what documentation looks like in practice:
- Certificate of Analysis (COA): An official document from a third party that confirms that food products, substrates, and water meet quality, safety, and regulatory standards. It verifies heavy metals, microbial counts, and pesticide residues.
- Substrate sourcing: For commercial produce growers, all purchased substrates and soil amendments must go through a validated treatment process or must be handled like untreated materials.
- Water quality records: Water used to grow, harvest, and pack produce must be documented by produce growers. They should closely monitor and record their water source, use practices, and testing schedules—they should also address any heavy metal contamination that could occur in their water systems.
- Pesticide use: Growers must note what pesticide they applied, when, and at what rate.
- Chain of custody: Many retailers want to trace a product back through every input. The benefit of a closed-loop CEA system really comes into play here.
CEA growers who build these documentation practices aren’t just staying compliant, they’re building an advantage that field growers can’t match.
How This Affects Growers
For many growers, the bigger question is practical: What does building this documentation actually cost?
The average cost of a COA depends on crop type and what growers are testing for. Tests can range anywhere from $10 to $800 per sample. Here are a few tests growers typically complete:
- Basic Microbial Screen: Tests for common pathogens like E.Coli, salmonella, and listeria.
- General Food Safety Screen: Combines microbial testing with checks for yeast, mold, and coliforms.
- Pesticide/Heavy Metal Panel: Tests for pesticide residues and heavy metal concentrations like lead, cadmium, arsenic, and mercury.
- Nutritional Analysis: Documents macro and micronutrient content. This test is more about label and compliance claims than food safety.
A few other factors determine total cost as well, including test frequency, rushed lab results, and the accreditation of testing facilities.
These costs add up fast, but as consumers become more aware of where their produce comes from, the cost of not testing can climb even higher.
As retailers crack down on these requirements, suppliers who don’t have proper documentation can easily lose the contracts they have. Some retailers established traceability deadlines in 2025, well ahead of what the FDA requires.
While the official FSMA compliance deadline was pushed back from January 2026 to July 2028, the real deadline has already passed. Retailers are already making decisions based on documentation readiness, meaning growers who wait until 2028 could already be falling behind and losing contracts.
Breaking Down the CEA Advantage
Since CEA inputs are controlled by the grower, they’re much easier to document. Here’s a brief breakdown of how documentation looks for CEA growers specifically.
- COA: With controlled and consistent inputs, growers can test their produce one time and apply their results repeatedly across growing cycles.
- Substrate sourcing: CEA growers choose and purchase substrates carefully, making it much easier for them to document treatment history than traditional field growers.
- Water quality records: Hydroponic and recirculating systems have water source and quality tightly controlled. This makes it easier for CEA growers to identify contamination before it reaches the crop.
- Pesticide use: CEA growers typically use fewer pesticides than field growers—applications are made in a confined space. This gives growers a clear and well-defined paper trail.
- Chain of custody: Every input in CEA systems enters through a controlled point, often making end-to-end traceability straightforward.
CEA doesn’t guarantee clean inputs. But it does give growers the tools to prove it, and that’s what buyers are asking for.