Kronan said cucumbers have sold out in stores across Iceland. The sales picked up so quickly that the store did not have time to prepare, said Gudrun Adalsteinsdottir, the company’s chief executive. “We are, just literally, eating it up,” joked Gudny Ljosba Hreinsdottir, 29, who runs Wake Up Reykjavik, an Icelandic tourism company with a walking food tour…

  • bunkyprewster
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    20 days ago

    There is also a slight shortage of carbon dioxide, she said, a key element of greenhouse production

    Huh?

    • Aatube@kbin.melroy.orgOP
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      20 days ago

      Industrial greenhouses feed photosynthesis—which is how plants make food by turning carbon dioxide and water into oxygen—a lot more is what I"m assuming this means.

    • The_v@lemmy.world
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      20 days ago

      Iceland produces most of their cucumbers in high tech greenhouses using geothermal energy for heat and light.

      Greenhouse cucumbers grow best in temps around 25-35c. Since the ambient temp in Iceland is usually cooler than this, venting the greenhouse is uncommon.

      As the plants use CO2 in photosynthesis the levels of CO2 in the air decline and the O2 levels increase. The lower levels of CO2 drastically slow down the cucumbers growth. The growers often supplement the plants with CO2 from tanks.