Le Nord : revue internationale des Pays de Nord - 01.06.1944, Side 208

Le Nord : revue internationale des Pays de Nord - 01.06.1944, Side 208
186 LE NORD with greenhouses of this kind, but thousands of hectares which might just as well be heated in this way, are waiting for their being put under glass. In these greenhouses any degree of heat may be maintained all the year round without any expenditure at all for fuel, regardless of snow-storms and frost, and sunlight may be replaced by electric light. There is a possibility of grow- ing all cultivated growths — even southern fruits — now. Here there are undreamt-of possibilities of progress on a large scale. Even the whole of Reykjavik is now heated in the same way by means of the hot springs. From the springs, which yield an amount of about 250 litres of water a second at a degree of heat of 90 C., the water is conducted at minimum loss of heat to Reykjavik through a pipe-line about 9 miles long. The consump- tion of coals in this town with its 40,000 inhabitants thus is re- duced to a minimum, the more so as there has already been built a power plant, which supplies sufficient power for the industries, and cheap electricity for light and cooking in private houses. So it is not only a question of private economy, but also to the highest degree of importance to national economy to utilize these natural forces to the greatest extent possible. In the Saga Period Iceland was wooded from mountain to fiord. The wood formed a natural protection against the weather, but in the years of poverty of Iceland it was nearly completely destroyed; it was not any large forest, but it was of some im- portance, as only the wood was able to prevent the surface from blowing off. What happened in Iceland is remarkable and in- structive, because here as perhaps nowhere else we see the value and importance of the preservation of the woods. By the dis- forestation of the country the sand-drift increases and lays waste large stretches of land. Where formerly — particularly in the south country — there were flourishing farms with luxuriant growth of plants, we now see waste plains of sand and gravel. In many places there are mounds, metres high, the so-called “ships,” which here and there in the sands give ample evidence of the ravages of the forces of nature. The Government has realized that the cultivation of the wood is best made under its own leadership. The result of the work is only to be sought in a distant future, and the casual owner perhaps will not live to see it. The country is still very bare in Ice- land, only in favourably situated tracts we find remnants of the
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Le Nord : revue internationale des Pays de Nord

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