Fluence Reports Three-Fold Increase in LED Usage Across Cultivation Stages in Fifth Annual “State of the Cannabis Lighting Market”
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- by Fluence Bioengineering
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Developed with Cannabis Business Times, the report underscores cultivators’ growing confidence in LED capabilities
AUSTIN, Texas (Nov. 10, 2020) – Fluence by OSRAM (Fluence), a leading global provider of energy-efficient LED lighting solutions for commercial cannabis and agriculture production, today released findings from the fifth annual “State of the Cannabis Lighting Market” report produced in partnership with Cannabis Business Times, whose mission is to accelerate the success of legal cannabis cultivators.
The fifth installment of the report reinforces Fluence’s ongoing commitment to exploring the interaction between light and life through market research and in-depth scientific study. The report unveils insights from cultivators throughout North America surveyed by Readex Research, a nationally recognized, third-party research house.
In his opening remarks for the 2020 report, Fluence CEO David Cohen notes the year-over-year rise in LED adoption and “that more growers are placing greater emphasis on scientific research to support product development.”
Revealing tripled LED usage across all stages of cultivation over the last five years, this year’s report reflects on the evolving and maturing cannabis market through yearly comparisons and supporting insights from leading researchers and commercial cannabis cultivators. Key findings include:[unordered_list style=”circle” animate=”no” font_weight=”bold”]
- LED usage is the preferred lighting method among cultivators across cultivation stages, with more than 50 percent of respondents reporting LED lighting usage in propagation, vegetation and flowering.
- “Light spectrum” moved to the No. 1 most important factor when purchasing a lighting fixture—tied with light intensity.
- A greater number of cultivators measure how much light their crops receive—72 percent in 2020 compared to 55 percent in 2016.
- 17 percent of cultivators said that ensuring consistent, even lighting across crops is a top operational challenge.