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Arctic greenhouse provides locals fresh produce year-round

A greenhouse in the northern Canadian community of Kuujjuaq, Nunavik is providing fresh local produce for residents of the Arctic region for the first time. The greenhouse will help improve local food security by extending the growing season past the summer months.

Angie Trombley carries a crate of Islanders, purple-colored heirloom peppers, grown in a caterpillar-style greenhouse at the Squire Tarbox Farm on Westport Island, Maine. Greenhouse projects in Arctic regions are giving locals more access to fresh produce.

Robert F. Bukaty/AP/File

September 29, 2014

´¡ÌýÌýbased in the northern Canadian community of Kuujjuaq, Nunavik is providing fresh localÌýproduce for residents of the Arctic region for the first time. Members of this community have had little opportunity to include produce in their diet due to arctic conditions unsuitable for agriculture and high food prices. Many of them have expressed theirÌýÌý·É¾±³Ù³óÌýÌý¾±²ÔÌýÌýÌý.

Processed food comprises more thanÌýÌýof the average diet of individuals in Nunavik. At present, the demands of a growing population make the existing traditional food system in the region unable to adequately feedÌýthe community. The greenhouse will help improve local food security by extending the growing season past the summer months.

"In Northern Quebec, we are not linked to the road network—that means all of our fresh produce has to be flown in air freight," says Jason Aitchison, General Manager of.,Ìýan organization assisting with the project's hydroponic gardens. "This has serious cost implications even with government transportation subsidies. For the communities north of KuujjuaqÌýup along the Ungava coastline, the cost implications are even greater and the quality of the fresh produce deteriorates the further north you go."

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The project originated with a greenhouse that was built byÌýÌýon the outskirts of Kuujjuaq in the 1990s for research purposes. Presently, the greenhouse is managed by the municipality and a group of volunteers. Community members are welcome to use any of the greenhouse’s 21 garden plots to grow crops during the summer. Some of the produce that has come out of the garden includes peppers, beans, tomatoes, carrots, and herbs.

The project was funded entirely by the Kativik Regional Government’s Department of Research and Economic Development. At present, the project coordinators are focused on establishing the greenhouse project as a community-based nonprofit, muchÌýlike theÌýÌýin the Northwest Territories,Ìýsince acquiring the funding and support necessary to establish the greenhouse as a self-sustaining enterprise continues to be a challenge. However, the greenhouse may receive financial support in the future from, a Quebecois economic development strategy that will, among other objectives, support producers and sellers of locally-grown foods and the creation of a bio-food research network.

"Weather is also a major challenge forÌýthe coastal communities to fly in and out of, as is the climate when, for example, you'reÌýloading orÌýoffloading goods in -40 Celcius temperatures plus wind chill," says Aitchison. "You can imagine no matter how well packed your tomatoes or lettuce may be,ÌýtheyÌýwill no longer be farm fresh—that's for sure."

The project coordinators are also looking for more space to expand the project and to involve more of the community such asÌýthe Inuit,Ìýwhose food systems have not traditionallyÌýincluded agriculture. Planners from this area hope that the development of greenhouses will catalyze a local food initiative that will help local communities feed and employ themselves. Aitchison says that they intend to distribute the produce from the greenhouses to local senior homes and to the underserved.

The greenhouse project has inspired a number of other complementary projects that will support the residents of Kuujjuaq in their efforts to make agriculture more central to their lives and the development of their community. One of the projects includes a composting program, which has redirected organic waste generated by local stores from the landfill by converting it into fertilizer for the greenhouse gardens. Other projects involve a youth agriculture program and a horticultural therapy program that will serve mental health patients at a supervised living residence.

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The greenhouse managers are currently conducting test cropsÌýthat include strawberries and cauliflowerÌýto select for the most optimal varieties. They are alsoÌýconsidering the use of LED lights to meet the project's electrical needs.

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