7greeneyes
MedicalNLovingIt!
- Joined
- Jul 25, 2008
- Messages
- 8,071
- Reaction score
- 789
I'm beginning to get back in the swing of things. After losing my job of 17 years and having to go on dialysis, my life has been hectic.
Been perusing LED's looking for the best bloom led system equivalent to the footprint and lumen output of my 1000kw hps hid. Any suggestions on model or make of a decent light?
I'm looking to get back into growing after yet another hiatus and want to run my bloom room cooler, thus the led's. Gotta a lot of flavors to pop and want to get back to it.
And now the news :rofl:
Keeper frosty --7GE :ccc:
url: http://www.calgarysun.com/2016/08/2...nsion-the-size-of-10-canadian-football-fields
Imagine a marijuana grow-op in a greenhouse the size of ten Canadian football fields.
That’s what Vancouver-based Aurora Cannabis Inc. is aiming to build in central Alberta, a 600,000-sq.-ft. facility with the capacity to produce up to an estimated 70,000 kg. of cannabis once it begins production, expected by the summer of 2018.
It could become the country’s largest producer, though Ontario-based Aphria Inc. recently bought a swath of land capable of holding a million sq.-ft. of production space, for $6.5 million.
Aurora, currently Alberta’s only licensed producer of medical marijuana, already operates a sprawling 55,200 sq.-ft. facility in Cremona, northwest of Calgary.
But Aurora estimates demand for medical pot alone is growing by 10% each month. The market for licensed buds is only expected to blossom under Ottawa’s plans to legalize recreational use, with legislation expected next spring.
“We’re inventing a new industry in real time,” said Cam Battley, the company’s senior vice-president.
Aurora said Tuesday it had finished the design, engineering and tender process for the first of three construction phases. Once fully built, the massive automated greenhouse will employ machines to irrigate, monitor, harvest and package the crops.
“It’s going to be a hybrid greenhouse that will have four-season growing, with extremely high technology and highly automated,” Battley said.
“This will give us the ability to produce massive amounts of cannabis for medical purposes and, ultimately once legislation has been implemented by the federal government, to serve the consumer market as well.”
Health Canada has estimated revenues from medical marijuana would hit $1.3 billion with 450,000 patients by 2024, though an analyst at Dundee Capital Markets is far more bullish.
Based on licensed marijuana markets in the United States, Dundee analyst Daniel Pearlstein estimates Canada’s medical market will be worth $2 billion to $3 billion in the same time frame with 800,000 projected patients.
Pearlstein forecasts Canadian revenues from recreational sales would reach $3 billion to $5 billion by 2024, should the Liberal government move ahead with its legalization agenda.
Aurora has not yet received approvals from Mountainview County for its expansion project, which has already attracted some local opposition.
Area residents are worried about the impact on traffic and storm water drainage, among other issues, according to Reeve Bruce Beattie, who believes medical pot production brings economic benefits.
“We’re looking at a province with a heavy reliance on one industry, and we’re seeing the results of that,” Beattie said.
“We need to look for alternative economic activity.”
Aurora’s existing facility is among 34 licensed medical marijuana growers in Canada, with most of them based in Ontario and British Columbia. After launching sales in early January, it had attracted 6,500 patients within seven months.
The facility can currently produce upwards of 7,000 kg. of medical pot a year.
Aurora estimates the maximum output of its proposed facility would weigh as much as five city buses.
Been perusing LED's looking for the best bloom led system equivalent to the footprint and lumen output of my 1000kw hps hid. Any suggestions on model or make of a decent light?
I'm looking to get back into growing after yet another hiatus and want to run my bloom room cooler, thus the led's. Gotta a lot of flavors to pop and want to get back to it.
And now the news :rofl:
Keeper frosty --7GE :ccc:
url: http://www.calgarysun.com/2016/08/2...nsion-the-size-of-10-canadian-football-fields
(Canada) Aurora Cannabis, a licensed Alberta marijuana grower, plans expansion the size of 10 Canadian football fields
Imagine a marijuana grow-op in a greenhouse the size of ten Canadian football fields.
That’s what Vancouver-based Aurora Cannabis Inc. is aiming to build in central Alberta, a 600,000-sq.-ft. facility with the capacity to produce up to an estimated 70,000 kg. of cannabis once it begins production, expected by the summer of 2018.
It could become the country’s largest producer, though Ontario-based Aphria Inc. recently bought a swath of land capable of holding a million sq.-ft. of production space, for $6.5 million.
Aurora, currently Alberta’s only licensed producer of medical marijuana, already operates a sprawling 55,200 sq.-ft. facility in Cremona, northwest of Calgary.
But Aurora estimates demand for medical pot alone is growing by 10% each month. The market for licensed buds is only expected to blossom under Ottawa’s plans to legalize recreational use, with legislation expected next spring.
“We’re inventing a new industry in real time,” said Cam Battley, the company’s senior vice-president.
Aurora said Tuesday it had finished the design, engineering and tender process for the first of three construction phases. Once fully built, the massive automated greenhouse will employ machines to irrigate, monitor, harvest and package the crops.
“It’s going to be a hybrid greenhouse that will have four-season growing, with extremely high technology and highly automated,” Battley said.
“This will give us the ability to produce massive amounts of cannabis for medical purposes and, ultimately once legislation has been implemented by the federal government, to serve the consumer market as well.”
Health Canada has estimated revenues from medical marijuana would hit $1.3 billion with 450,000 patients by 2024, though an analyst at Dundee Capital Markets is far more bullish.
Based on licensed marijuana markets in the United States, Dundee analyst Daniel Pearlstein estimates Canada’s medical market will be worth $2 billion to $3 billion in the same time frame with 800,000 projected patients.
Pearlstein forecasts Canadian revenues from recreational sales would reach $3 billion to $5 billion by 2024, should the Liberal government move ahead with its legalization agenda.
Aurora has not yet received approvals from Mountainview County for its expansion project, which has already attracted some local opposition.
Area residents are worried about the impact on traffic and storm water drainage, among other issues, according to Reeve Bruce Beattie, who believes medical pot production brings economic benefits.
“We’re looking at a province with a heavy reliance on one industry, and we’re seeing the results of that,” Beattie said.
“We need to look for alternative economic activity.”
Aurora’s existing facility is among 34 licensed medical marijuana growers in Canada, with most of them based in Ontario and British Columbia. After launching sales in early January, it had attracted 6,500 patients within seven months.
The facility can currently produce upwards of 7,000 kg. of medical pot a year.
Aurora estimates the maximum output of its proposed facility would weigh as much as five city buses.