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posted by CoolHand on Friday November 04 2016, @08:51PM   Printer-friendly
from the hydroponics-not-just-for-growing-ganja dept.

The landscape is virtually treeless around a coastal hub town above Alaska's Arctic Circle, where even summer temperatures are too cold for northern-growing forests to take root.

Amid these unforgiving conditions, a creative kind of farming is sprouting up in the largely Inupiat community of Kotzebue.

A subsidiary of a local Native corporation is using hydroponics technology to grow produce inside an insulated, 40-foot shipping container equipped with glowing magenta LED lights. Arctic Greens is harvesting kale, various lettuces, basil and other greens weekly from the soil-free system and selling them at the supermarket in the community of nearly 3,300.

"We're learning," Will Anderson, president of the Native Kikiktagruk Inupiat Corp., said of the business launched last spring. "We're not a farming culture."

The venture is first of its kind north of the Arctic Circle, according to the manufacturer of Kotzebue's pesticide-free system. The goal is to set up similar systems in partnerships with other rural communities far from Alaska's minimal road system—where steeply priced vegetables can be more than a week in transit and past their prime by the time they arrive at local stores.


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  • (Score: 3, Insightful) by JNCF on Friday November 04 2016, @09:42PM

    by JNCF (4317) on Friday November 04 2016, @09:42PM (#422638) Journal

    Are you against the concept of interplanetary civilizations? If so, you would damn us to a relatively quick extinction. If not, the inhospitable edges of the world seem like a good testing ground for the sorts of technology we'd need for an independant Martian village. There are other reasons, of course. Some folks get sentimental about ancestral land. I'm not, but then, I'm a USAmerican of largely European descent; I do not live on the land of my ancestors, and I never have.

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