
Dossier
Seaweed
There is an increasing interest within Western Europe for the cultivation of seaweed as a resource for feed, bio-stimulants for soil and crops, and as a bio-feedstock. The fact that the cultivation of seaweed requires no farmland and that many types grow in salt or brackish water are distinct advantages. As yet, the cultivation of seaweed in the Dutch waters is limited, but in the coming decades more wind farms will be developed in the North Sea with opportunities for a combination with large-scale seaweed cultivation. Seaweed is already cultivated extensively in Asian countries, but the production methods are not always sustainable. Wageningen University & Research (WUR) works on sustainable seaweed cultivation technology, explicitly targeting the North Sea area.
Topics on which our efforts focus are:
- The economic and technological feasibility of large-scale cultivation of seaweed
- Spatial requirements and the effects on the marine ecosystem
- The development of sustainable cultivation methods and seaweed breeding
- The processing of harvested biomass and development of bio-refinery and fermentation technology
- Development of sales channels and business cases
- Taking stock of risks, for example regarding food safety
Our research is project-based. Funding is provided by, among others, the European Union, the Ministry of Agriculture, Nature and Food Safety, TKI-Agri&Food and the business and seaweed sectors.
News 2019-2020
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Seaweed as a sustainable food source
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Car drives 80 kilometres on fuel from seaweed
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Unique innovation challenge for universities of technology
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Crickets and seaweed as meat substitutes? Mansholt lecture 2019 focussed on protein transition
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Insects, seaweed wraps and vegan ice cream on the shelves at Lidl
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A future-proof diet with future foods
Reports and articles
- Report: Development of Offshore Seaweed Cultivation: food safety, cultivation, ecology and economy - Mar 2019
- Report: A Triple P review of the feasibility of sustainable offshore seaweed production in the North Sea - Sep 2013
- Farming at sea - Sustainable seaweed Published in Wageningen World no. 3 2011
Publications
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The business case for seaweed aquaculture in the North Sea : Learning from international experiences
Wageningen : Wageningen Economic Research (Report / Wageningen Economic Research 2023-019) - ISBN 9789464475586 - p. -
Evaluation of Laminaria Digitata Hydrolysate for the Production of Bioethanol and Butanol by Fermentation
Fermentation 9 (2023)1. - ISSN 2311-5637 - 15 p. -
Integrated biorefinery approach to valorise Saccharina latissima biomass : Combined sustainable processing to produce biologically active fucoxanthin, mannitol, fucoidans and alginates
Environmental Technology and Innovation 29 (2023). - ISSN 2352-1864 - 12 p. -
Seaweed as a novel protein source for broilers
Seaweed as a novel protein source for broilers, All About Feed, 2023-01-27, Melanie Epp, https://www.allaboutfeed.net/all-about/new-proteins/seaweed-as-a-novel-protein-source-for-broilers/ -
The Bio Economic Seaweed Model (BESeM) for modelling tropical seaweed cultivation–experimentation and modelling
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Food for thought: A realistic perspective on the potential for offshore aquaculture in the Dutch North Sea
Journal of Sea Research 191 (2023). - ISSN 1385-1101 - p. 102323 - 102323. -
Fisheries restrictions and their cascading effects on herbivore abundance and macroalgae removal at Kenyan coral reefs
Journal of Experimental Marine Biology and Ecology 559 (2023). - ISSN 0022-0981 -
Socioeconomic opportunities and challenges to seaweed multi-trophic aquaculture: case of pond culture in Brebes, Indonesia
In: Book of abstracts of theme session Q. - : ICES - p. 16 - 16. -
Conditions for successful seaweed value chain development: lessons from Indonesia
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Potential use of seaweed in poultry feed remains limited
Potential use of seaweed in poultry feed remains limited, Feed Strategy - Watt Global Media, 2022-02-22, Emma Penrod, https://www.feedstrategy.com/animal-nutrition-formulation/potential-use-of-seaweed-in-poultry-feed-remains-limited/