Can LEDs Help Grow Food in Canada’s North?

Science LED Food

 

 

June 06 2016

LED-based technology originally conceived to help feed astronauts in space may help grow fresh fruits and vegetables in Canada’s north, according to a recent Toronto Star article by Amy Pataki.

A sealed, stainless steel cube the size of a baker’s rack, with shelving and a glass roof through which LEDs shine would allow 24-hour growth 12 months a year in a region where high energy costs and virtually no sun for months on end limit the use of greenhouses.

Using LEDs to stimulate plant growth is already a success in 

• Japan, where strawberry growers tripled their yield using supplemental blue LEDs

• the Netherlands, where purple LEDs stimulate lettuce growth

• Kuwait, where LEDs help grow cherry tomatoes and cucumbers

For the Northern Farm Training Institute in Hay River, NWT, Norwegian lighting firm Intravision is customizing the spectrum for optimal photosynthesis. “We have to be careful,” Pataki quotes environmental biologist Mike Dixon, a University of Guelph professor and director of the school’s Controlled Environment Systems Research Facility. Dixon’s lab is working on the right colour “recipe” for each plant. “By adjusting the lighting, we can make the plants taste different. You don’t want a strawberry that tastes like a doughnut,” he told Pataki.

The proposed pilot project would grow six perishable foods — cucumbers, tomatoes, strawberries, bell peppers, lettuce and herbs — which now must be imported at great cost. It takes 12 days for strawberries to travel from Mexico to Yellowknife. Shipped-in food is expensive: bananas that cost about $1.25 a kilo in Toronto are $4.17 in Nunavut, writes Pataki. 

Thirty of the stainless steel prototypes cost about $2 million to build.

Read the original article: https://www.thestar.com/life/food_wine/restaurants/2016/05/06/how-space-technology-is-helping-canadians-boldly-grow-where-no-one-has-grown-before.html.

 

Related Articles


Changing Scene

  • Salex Expands to Ottawa: Lighting Up the Nation’s Capital

    As the New Year begins, Salex is thrilled to announce an exciting milestone: Salex is now operating in Ottawa. This expansion marks the next chapter in Salex’s journey of delivering innovative lighting solutions and exceptional service to the design and architectural communities. Salex is honoured to bring their expertise to the vibrant and growing Ottawa market. Read More…

  • Luminis Wins Two 2024 Product Innovation Awards

    Luminis is pleased to announce its Syrios Pro family and Jaki luminaires have each received a 2024 Product Innovation Award from Architectural Products magazine. The PIA program was created to celebrate the ground-breaking products, systems, and materials that help architects achieve new levels of creativity or performance in their design. Each entry is reviewed by… Read More…


Design

  • Project Story: Sainte-Thérèse High School Outdoor Lighting Upgrade

    Project Story: Sainte-Thérèse High School Outdoor Lighting Upgrade

    August 6, 2024 Built in 1980, the building that houses Sainte-Thérèse high school, in Quebec Canada, was looking a little worse for the wear. Renovation work began with two major projects: introducing a multidisciplinary sports centre, as well as redesigning the parking lots.  The employee and visitor parking lots were completely reconfigured during phase 1… Read More…

  • Resilience Illuminated: Reviving Westminster Pier Park After Devastating Fire

    Resilience Illuminated: Reviving Westminster Pier Park After Devastating Fire

    In September 2020, the picturesque city of New Westminster near Vancouver in British Columbia suffered a devastating setback when an intentionally set fire destroyed much of the city’s waterfront park, including its urban beach, sand volleyball courts, and iconic art installation known as Wow Westminster. The fire, which burned for ten days before firefighters could… Read More…


New Products