Students to build greenhouse in Nunavut to produce cheaper food

B00Mer

Keep Calm and Carry On
Sep 6, 2008
44,800
7,297
113
Rent Free in Your Head
www.getafteritmedia.com
Students to build greenhouse in Nunavut to produce cheaper food



TORONTO -- A group of university students will head to Nunavut this summer to build a greenhouse to produce cheaper food for one remote community.

Ryerson University students Stefany Nieto and Ben Canning met two years ago and wanted to tackle an issue affecting Canadians. They are part of Enactus, an international organization that connects students, professors and business experts with the goal of using entrepreneurial action to raise living standards.

They pondered projects that included providing skills to inmates and producing baby warmers for northern families.

d then they came across food scarcity in the North.

Food is hard to come by in Nunavut, especially produce, which arrives via boat or plane. And it's egregiously expensive. Starvation is therefore a real threat in places such as Repulse Bay, at the Arctic Circle in central Nunavut.

"That's the reality they have to face every day," said Canning, 19. "And Canada is supposedly a developed country. The situation is just baffling."

So they decided to take action, emulating similar programs in Alaska and Sweden. They have called their project "Growing North."

Last summer, the students flew to Repulse Bay -- which will revert to its traditional Inuktitut name, Naujaat, on July 2 -- to do further research.

They said they spoke with 10 per cent of the population. The community loved their idea, and has since donated land for the greenhouse.

Mayor Solomon Malliki is excited about the project.

"This should help. The cost of food is a major problem," he said, adding he spent $13 for four apples just last week. "It would be special if we could eat fresh strawberries and blueberries."

The students also asked residents what foods they'd like to grow.

The answers were typical: potatoes, onions, peppers, cucumbers and tomatoes.

But there were also requests for "crazy stuff like mangoes," Canning said. "Obviously we can't grow a mango tree on bedrock or in a greenhouse."

The plan, instead, is to focus on less exotic fruits, vegetables and herbs, which will be grown with hydroponic technology that uses nutrient-rich water rather than soil.

With the community on board, the students then had to raise money. The business management students said they managed to raise more than $150,000 through donations from Ryerson, Brookfield Institute and several others, along with a few online funding campaigns.

They are in the process of buying a greenhouse from Growing Spaces, which looks like an igloo made of plastic panels. Technically it's called a geodesic dome, a modular sphere made with triangular polycarbonate panels.

The Colorado-based Growing Spaces says their domes are perfect for harsh climates because they can withstand 200 km/h winds and 250 centimetres of snow.

In early August, Nieto will head up to Nunavut for five weeks while Canning and three other students will join her two weeks later to build the greenhouse along with members of the community.

The dome's parts are scheduled to arrive by ship on Aug. 15. It will take about a week to put together, Nieto said.

"The beauty is it's like Ikea furniture and comes with instructions and parts that you put together," said Nieto, 20.

The greenhouse will become part of the curriculum of Tusarvik School, where students will work in it as part of a course, and the local Catholic priest will watch over the greenhouse year-round.

The students have grand plans. If their calculations hold true, food will be 50 per cent cheaper.

And they say the operation, which is a non-profit, will break even after the first year. If that's the case, they said, they will look to build greenhouses in four nearby communities.

"We essentially want to be the healthy McDonald's of the north," Canning said.

"We want to have a greenhouse in every single community in Nunavut to reduce the cost of food. If we can't reduce the cost of logistical and transport costs, then let's go ahead and do it locally."

source: Students to build greenhouse in Nunavut to produce cheaper food | CTV News

.......................................

Now this would be an awesome project for crowdsourcing revenue to expand their operation.
 

taxslave

Hall of Fame Member
Nov 25, 2008
36,362
4,337
113
Vancouver Island
Only two problems that I see,
Will these greenhouses stand up to the harsh Arctic winters?
How long will the residents hold an interest in being farmers?
 

SLM

The Velvet Hammer
Mar 5, 2011
29,151
3
36
London, Ontario
Only two problems that I see,
Will these greenhouses stand up to the harsh Arctic winters?

That has to something that would have been considered already. It's modeled after/inspired by working programs in Alaska and Sweden.

How long will the residents hold an interest in being farmers?

It's going to be part of the school curriculum.
 

tay

Hall of Fame Member
May 20, 2012
11,548
0
36
As long as the gubmint keeps out of it. Here's what happens when gubmint gets involved in greenhouses.
The Sprung Greenhouse







It was the 'Private' sector running it into the ground.


The taxpayers, courtesy of the PC's just kept dumping money into it.


This plan is different in as much as they will not be growing food to sell to another market but for themselves .....






In 1987, the provincial government partnered with Calgary businessman Philip Sprung to build a multimillion-dollar greenhouse complex near the St. John's-Mount Pearl boundary. Sprung claimed that his unique greenhouse covering and high-tech hydroponics process could grow more plants faster than conventional methods. Premier A. Brian Peckford announced the facility would create jobs, tap into a profitable export market, and supply local consumers with fresh and affordable vegetables year-round.

Instead, the operation could not meet production quotas, find a suitable market, or turn a profit. It cost taxpayers $22 million and the Progressive Conservative Party its credibility.
 

MHz

Time Out
Mar 16, 2007
41,030
43
48
Red Deer AB
Where does it say it will be in production all year long. The local Priest will be taking care of it year round and that doesn't promote that it will be in production in the winter months. There is certainly enough NG available that they could do it as long as the lights were on generators run by NG also. The exhaust could be used to jack up the CO2
 

MHz

Time Out
Mar 16, 2007
41,030
43
48
Red Deer AB
Why, is that the route you would have taken? Stewart Lake should jump on this, they could run then year round and sell the produce at a 'Farmer's Market' BTW you should be able to grow anything in a greenhouse as you can duplicate the climate of any place on earth, that would include exotic fruits but why bother when raspberry bushes and other similar products are as close as you can get to 'natural plants'.
 

MHz

Time Out
Mar 16, 2007
41,030
43
48
Red Deer AB
That would work to run the generators and that exhaust could be used in the greenhouse as that fuel doesn;t produce carbon-monoxide, just CO2 (mostly)
One NG turbine would spin a genset also, you know, when not blowing snow.