DutchNews, October 26, 2015
Seaweed grown in the North Sea will be able
to provide as much sustainable energy as wind turbines by 2020, according to
the Dutch energy research centre ECN.
The European-funded AT Sea project is
developing textiles and systems for seaweed cultivation which it hopes will lead
to large scale cultivation and harvesting in the open sea. The seaweed will
then be used by the biotech, food and biomass industries.
According to the ECN
in Monday’s Volkskrant, tests in Norway, Scotland and Ireland show that seaweed
can be grown and harvested efficiently, which opens the way for production on a
massive scale.
However, although the techniques are successful, there is still
a long way to go, Groningen University researcher André Faaij told the Volkskrant. In particular, food for
the seaweed will pose a problem, Faaij, who is not involved with the research,
said.
The availability of foodstuffs will decline quickly during mass
production, Faaij said. ‘Monitoring disease is also an issue during mass
production, as it has been with intensive salmon farming,’ he pointed out.
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