How U.S govt uses seaweeds to fight climate change
By Nneka Nwogwugwu
As part of efforts to fight climate change, California government in the United States is making efforts to use seaweeds to tackle climate issues.
Seaweed has become a symbol of hope in mitigating climate change, and at least a half dozen companies are actively trying to farm it in California. They aim to be part of what is called the blue economy, a movement to use the ocean’s resources in a sustainable, if not regenerative, way.
But getting a permit to set up a seaweed farm in state waters involves navigating a permitting process that can take many years and cost many thousands of dollars.
Seaweed absorbs carbon, reduces emissions on dairy farms. It can also be used as food, fuel and fertilizer. It requires nothing but seawater and sunlight to grow.
“I just don’t understand why this is so difficult when it’s something that is so important and could be so good for the environment,” said Daniel Marquez of PharmerSea, who has waited six years to get state permission to farm kelp on the 25-acre underwater site he leases north of Santa Barbara, for use in research and in the cosmetics company he owns with his wife.
Pointing to thriving seaweed farming industries in Alaska, Hawaii and Maine, would-be California seaweed growers say the bottleneck is getting in the way of what could be a boon to the environment. With the exception of a few locations where the state has granted jurisdiction to local harbor districts or ports, California has not issued a new lease for commercial aquaculture, including seaweed or shellfish, in more than 25 years.
The main reason is likely because applicants are uncertain they would be approved after going through what can be an expensive environmental review process required by California Environmental Quality Act, said said Randy Lovell, aquaculture coordinator for the state Department of Fish and Wildlife.
In another development, after three years of study, a team of scientists at the Scripps Institution of Oceanography at University of California San Diego is close to bringing their revolutionary product to battle climate change into the marketplace.
In short, studies show the seaweed they developed helps reduce the amount of damaging methane emitted when cows that eat the seaweed belch.