| Solar
Greenhouses Bring Vegetables in From The Cold
Solar greenhouses
that nurture vegetables despite outside temperatures as low
as minus 25 degrees Celsius are among the innovations recognised
by international energy awards this week.
The greenhouses, developed by the French
nongovernmental organisation GERES, are used in the Indian
Himalayan region of Ladakh.
The region's high altitude of 3,500 metres
and low rainfall result in an outdoor growing season of just
90 days a year making fresh vegetables imported from
the plains a rare treat but there is abundant sunshine
300 days a year.
Farmers grow food ranging from spinach
to strawberries in the winter and seedlings in the spring.
In autumn, the greenhouses extend the growing season of crops
such as tomatoes, cucumbers and grapes.
GERES will receive an Ashden Award for
Sustainable Energy at a ceremony in London, United Kingdom,
today (11 June).
Nearly 600 family-owned greenhouses were
installed by the end of 2008, which also increased incomes
by almost a third. Farmers sell or exchange surplus vegetables
and seedlings locally an estimated 50,000 people are
thought to have benefited from the fresh produce.
And because the locals transport fewer
vegetables, 460 tonnes of carbon dioxide emissions are avoided
every year.
The greenhouses consist largely of local
materials. Each has a long, south-facing side of heavy-duty
polythene; thick mud-brick walls to absorb heat during the
day and release it at night; and insulated walls and roof.
Some of the walls are painted black to
absorb heat. Natural ventilation prevents over-heating and
excessive humidity.
Each greenhouse costs around US$600 to
make. GERES provides the polythene, door and ventilation
about a quarter of the cost while prospective owners
either buy or collect the remaining materials and employ the
labour or do the work themselves.
"In a lot of places this is the first
time that fresh vegetables have been available in winter,"
says Vincent Stauffer, Indian country director for GERES.
Stauffer told SciDev.Net that the health
of people in the region has also improved it is difficult
to do a scientific assessment of health but there is anecdotal
evidence for this from both local doctors and the community,
he says.
GERES has provided free access to the
plans and people in Afghanistan, China, Nepal and Tajikistan
have now built the greenhouses. A community of practice to
exchange ideas about their use will appear on the Solar Greenhouse
website.
Other projects winning awards include
a biomass project in India, an efficient woodstove made in
China, solar power for homes in Ethiopia, and a Ugandan scheme
making fuel from agricultural waste.
International Development Enterprises
India, which supplies water pumps to farmers for irrigation,
won this year's Ashden Outstanding Achievement Award.
Source: SciDev.Net
Date: 11 June, 2009

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