Sinking rocks, nutrients, crop waste or seaweed in the ocean could lock away climate-warming carbon dioxide for centuries or more.
Moment, Ah-Hy u ng Alissa Park, and colleagues have developed an alkaline thermal treatment to break down the polysaccharid e ...
Dozens of companies and academic groups are pitching the same theory: that sinking rocks, nutrients, crop waste or seaweed in ...
As more studies and papers emerge about the wider ecosystem benefits of farming low trophic aquaculture species, there is ...
A small company, Planetary Technologies, is at the forefront of ocean-based carbon capture. Using magnesium oxide, they aim ...
An Irish Seaweed Association has been set up to providing a voice for ocean farmers — and with more than 7,500km of coastline ...
Ireland's first seaweed association has been launched to take advantage of what the group said is the untapped potential of seaweed farming for the country.
Seaweed farming, for example, is seen by some as a promising avenue for quickly growing carbon-consuming algae — but there are “longstanding questions” about its benefits, said Yuta Masuda ...
Despite being a seafaring nation for centuries, it is only in recent years that Norway rediscovered the value of seaweed - ...
Other companies are focused on growing seaweed and algae. These marine organisms act like plants on land, absorbing carbon dioxide from ... building a Sargassum farm between Brazil and West ...
Seaweed is also a major carbon sink, although some researchers ... aims to tackle the twin issues of high costs associated with land-based farming and limited cultivation periods by combining ...
A report by Primus Partners titled “Seaweed farming can touch a million lives” has said India’s seaweed sector, which is currently valued at ₹200 crore, could surge to ₹3,277 crore ...