Iceland review - 2013, Side 45

Iceland review - 2013, Side 45
ICELAND REVIEW 43 Bjarni when asked what the future holds for greenhouse farming. Helena dismisses a question on whether they would consider expanding into fruit production with a laugh. “I think we should concentrate on making the investments in enlarging our greenhouses pay off first.” It’s always a question of costs and benefits, Bjarni explains, and the starting costs are high. “But there might come a day when someone sees the potential in operating a large-scale greenhouse next to a power plant,” he adds, thereby eliminating the cost of energy distribution. “At the same time it would pose a threat to current greenhouse farming due to its small size and the relatively few people involved.” This is a potential recognized by founders of GeoGreenhouse, a company aiming for tomato export to the U.K. The plan is for the greenhouse to rise next to Hellisheiði power plant near Reykjavík and cover 50,000 square meters in the first stage. It would be ten times larger than the greenhouses at Friðheimar and cover more than a quarter of the area of all of Iceland’s greenhouses, glass and plastic, today. “We are in talks with investors,” says GeoGreenhouse managing director Sveinn Aðalsteinsson. He adds that negotiations are at a sensitive stage but hopes that a deal can be announced in the coming months. Environmentalists would celebrate if greenhouse farming were ever to become as important to the national economy as alu- minum smelters. One activist, internationally renowned musician Björk, has even suggest- ed that the controversial smelter under con- struction in Helguvík in Southwest Iceland be changed to a giant greenhouse, making Iceland self-sufficient in fruits and vegetables. An orchard in the snow would probably be a dream come true for both farmers and con- sumers but so far, it is only a pipe dream.  Powder snow covers the ground outside friðheimar but inside the greenhouses, geothermal heating and grow lights create the illusion of eternal summer. Helgi Jakobsson at gufuhlíð admires his jungle of cucumber lianas. Colorful gerbera fields inside the greenhouses of Espiflöt.

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