Pull To Refresh

Panama City, Panama

Uses solar unmanned vessels to sink invasive seaweed to the deep sea.

Country: Panama
Status: Concept
Type: Algae Sequestration

Pull To Refresh

Panama City, Panama

Uses solar unmanned vessels to sink invasive seaweed to the deep sea

Country: Panama
Status: Concept
Type: Algae Sequestration

Arbon Earth

Gothenburg, Sweden

Producing oceanpods to accomplish carbon removal at scale.

40 gigatonnes of CO2 needs to be removed from the atmosphere, annually. Arbon earth help reset climate change using algae.
Country: Sweden
Status: In Development
Type: Algae Sequestration

Marine Permaculture by Climate Foundation

Philippines

Marine Permaculture

With kelp’s help, marine ‘permaculture’ (farming in a sustainable and self-sufficient way) has the potential to turn not only the ocean round but the whole planet – because once we grow it at scale, kelp gives with one hand (food, feed, fuel, fertiliser and more) and takes with the other (carbon, out of the atmosphere and upper ocean, storing it safely in the middle and deep ocean for thousands of years).
Country: Phillipines
Country: Tasmania
Status: Operational
Type: Algae Sequestration

Global Algae

Kauai, Hawaii, USA

A new type of farm

Global Algae’s vision is to harness the unparalleled productivity of algae to provide food and fuel for the world, dramatically improving the environment, economy, and quality of life for all people.
Country: United States
Status: In Development
Type: Algae Sequestration

Running Tide

Portland, Maine, USA

On a mission to harness the power of the ocean since 2010.

Running Tide partners with nature to remove carbon durably and at scale. Made with materials from nature, their various Carbon Buoys designs are created to accelerate natural processes in the ocean. This work moves carbon from the fast cycle to the slow cycle, providing a pathway toward climatically relevant scale.
Country: United States
Status: In Development
Type: Algae Sequestration

Seaweed Generation

Jolly Harbour, Antigua and Barbuda

Sinks invasive seaweed to the bottom of the ocean, locking up carbon for hundreds of years

Seaweed generation uses robots to sink invasive seaweed into the deep ocean, locking away carbon for hundreds of years. Sinking Sargassum seaweed also helps prevent environmental disasters caused by the seaweed when it hits coasts, where it can also severely impact human health and livelihoods. It has the potential to scale to millions of tonnes of carbon removal.
Country: Antigua and Barbuda
Status: In Development
Type: Algae Sequestration

Seafields

Kingstown, Saint Vincent and the Grenadines

Captures and grows seaweed for carbon-negative bio-products.

Seafields capture and grow seaweed for use as bioplastics, fertilizer, and biofuel. Any seaweed not sold to industry is shredded, baled, and sunk to the ocean floor, where the carbon it contains can remain sequestered for hundreds of years. At scale, this could remove around a billion tonnes of carbon dioxide from the atmosphere annually.
Country: Saint Vincent and the Grenadines
Status: In Development
Type: Algae Sequestration