Greenhouse Cooling Pad and Shade Net Planning for Desert Farms

Desert and hot dry climate greenhouse projects need a complete climate strategy. A greenhouse structure alone cannot solve heat stress. Buyers should plan shading, ventilation, cooling pads, exhaust fans, irrigation, water quality and crop layout together.

Use shading before cooling

External shade net can reduce solar radiation before heat enters the greenhouse. Internal shading can also help manage light and crop stress. The shade rate should match the crop because too much shade can reduce growth.

Cooling pad and exhaust fan system

Cooling pads and exhaust fans are common in hot dry regions. System performance depends on greenhouse length, pad area, fan capacity, air path, water quality and maintenance. The system should be sized according to greenhouse dimensions and local climate.

Ventilation and air movement

Roof vents, side vents and circulation fans can support air exchange and reduce humidity problems. In some projects, natural ventilation and mechanical cooling need to work together.

Irrigation and water quality

Hot regions need reliable irrigation. Water quality can affect cooling pads, filters, drip irrigation and fertigation equipment. Buyers should check water source and filtration needs before ordering the full system.

FAQ

Are cooling pads enough for desert greenhouse?

Cooling pads help, but shading, ventilation, irrigation and water quality must also be planned.

What shade net rate should I choose?

It depends on crop, sunlight and local temperature. Too much shade can reduce crop growth.

Can film greenhouse work in desert climate?

Yes, but it needs proper shading, cooling, ventilation and irrigation design.

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