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Recommended 1 times. 1 Recommend
2009-11-13 at 17:29

Solar greenhouse

By Jodi Lundmark, tbnewswatch.com
103.5 The ThunderHave Breakfast with Brent each weekday morning on The Thunder, Today's Country Music Station, 103.5 & 104.5http://www.thethunder.ca
The Thunder Bay area sees about 1,286 hours of sunlight throughout the year; yet the growing season here is very short.

Commercial greenhouses usually start planting in March with the growing season finished by the end of September. But one local entrepreneur is trying to extend that season to 365 days.

Leo Hunnakko, president of Hunnakko Enterprises Inc., has built a prototype greenhouse, powered by the sun, which will hopefully allow him to grow vegetables throughout the winter.

Named GH365 and located on North Sideroad in Nolalu, the 18-by-22-foot greenhouse is a feasibility study to determine if the project will allow vegetables to grow in the region’s cold climate. Hunnakko said if successful, the greenhouse could have many beneficial applications.

"If you imagine being able to grow nutritious food in this northern climate year round, it overcomes issues of food security," he said. "It overcomes issues of nutritionally excellent food materials, which of course vegetables are. You can see there can be tremendous beneficial repercussions from a greenhouse such as this."

Throughout December, January and February, the region sees an average of 340 hours of sunlight; this inspired Hunnakko to harness the power of the sun.

With two four by eight-foot solar panels, thermal blinds and a heat-retention wall, the greenhouse will function with minimal electrical requirements, Hunnakko said. It does have an electrical back up system for overcast days.

"I could see farmers using a greenhouse like this to extend their growing season," Hunnakko said, adding even architects and designers could possibly consider adding solar greenhouses to homes in the future.

"You would essentially have homes that are not just places where you play, live, work, eat but also where you grow much of what you eat," he said.

Hunnakko did his research before building the prototype that cost more than $45,000. He consulted with the University of Manitoba’s department of biosystems engineering and local greenhouse operators before starting construction on GH365 in June. The testing and monitoring phase of the project will run until Oct. 2010.

Hunnakko said he isn’t looking to build greenhouses commercially but sees himself working as a consultant, co-ordinating similar projects for remote communities
TbNewsWatch.com

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Comments
Average Joe says:
I'm with SomeGuy on this. We need to be looking at these alternatives serioulsy. On the windfarm issue, seems like so many people are against these "ugly" wind turbines. I guess these same people think radioactive waste, Sulphur Dioxide and CO2 emmissions are "prettier". If you don't want a windfarm in your backyard, let's have your address and we'll have the pretty stuff delivered instead, free of charge.
2009-11-19 at 03:01

somewhatamused says:
Aren't most greenhouse's solar?
2009-11-16 at 06:34

tsb says:
SomeGuy obviously hates mountains and pretty things with all that pro-wind farm talk.
2009-11-16 at 04:57

SomeGuy says:
What a marvelous idea! Think how much energy is wasted and pollutants are created by trucking our fresh lettuce from California in the winter months.

I hope this project turns into a viable option as it would be nice to grow our food year around. Toss in some wind power and store it during the day for use at night. (The wind power was a serious comment)
2009-11-14 at 08:19

truckola says:
A good idea, but. The 2 solar hot water panels are good for hot water, but certainly not for space heating. In fact, the 2 flat panels are not very efficient in the low sunlight periods of Nov,Dec,Jan, as compared to evacuated tube systems. There will be little extra heat to heat the air in that large of a building, regardless of the passive solar gain for the 6 hours of effective sunlight per day(coming in those windows). What about the other 18 hours per day of net heat loss? I would think that the hydro will be on most of the time, from now on until March.

Sure it is nice weather right now, and the system might work for the 8 months of the year. Hydro "backup, is probably "primary" Nov-end of Feb.

I have a solar hot water system in use, and results have been pretty dismal since the nice weather of September. Not much "heat" has been produced since midOctober due cloud. I expect Nov-Dec will be the same, until the sunny days of January start.

Remember that although TBay gets over 2000 hrs of sunlight, only 5-6 direct hours per day will come thru those windows, and only on the sunny days. So, maybe 800-1000 direct sunny hours come thru those windows, at best, and not very strong sunlight energy in the Nov-Jan period

Hope it works for him.
2009-11-14 at MIDNIGHT

Toodleoo Caribou says:
The sunlight data for Thunder Bay is incorrect. We receive around 2,168 hours of bright sunshine each year. (I wonder how long before they start taxing us on it???)
2009-11-13 at 6:00 PM

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