- Ravens race past Steelers, Texans top Chargers as NFL playoffs start
- Scramble to shelter animals from Los Angeles wildfires
- Carefree Andreeva hails coach Martinez for making her 'fearless'
- China's women e-sports players defy sexism for love of the game
- Seoul confirms Ukraine captured two North Korean soldiers
- South Korea's Yoon will not attend first impeachment hearing
- Zheng, Andreeva win as rain lashes Australian Open on day one
- Olympic champion Zheng survives scare to reach Australian Open second round
- Firefighters race to beat LA blazes as winds grow and death toll hits 16
- Tunisian rehab barge offers hope for vulnerable sea turtles
- Spaun shoots 65 to seize Hawaii PGA lead as Fishburn fades
- Storms halt play on outside courts at Australian Open
- Tech sector's energy transition draws attention at Vegas show
- Texans make most of Chargers nightmare offense to win playoff opener
- Djokovic reveals 'energetic disc' as new secret weapon
- Stay inside to avoid toxic LA wildfire smoke, residents warned
- French far-right firebrand Le Pen buried in private ceremony
- Special counsel who led Trump prosecutions leaves US Justice Dept
- Rabiot helps Marseille keep pressure on PSG
- Shalulile rescues Sundowns as FAR Rabat, Pyramids qualify
- Milan flop on Conceicao's San Siro debut, Juve draw again
- Man City captain Walker wants to leave, says Guardiola
- Sudan paramilitary leader says 'lost' Al-Jazira state capital
- LA fires threaten more homes as winds forecast to pick up
- Five things to know about New Glenn, Blue Origin's new rocket
- Penalty king Kane sends Bayern past Gladbach
- Man City hit Salford for eight, Liverpool cruise into FA Cup 4th round
- French far-right firebrand Le Pen's buried in private ceremony
- Draw specialists Juve held by derby rivals Torino
- Rockets-Hawks game postponed due to winter storm
- Blue Origin set for first launch of giant New Glenn rocket
- Toulouse, 11-try Bordeaux-Begles into Champions Cup last 16
- Dutch police detain hundreds at climate protest
- Lyon slip to Ligue 1 loss at Brest
- Toulouse edge Sharks, Bordeaux-Begles hammer Exeter to reach Champions Cup last 16
- Liverpool, Chelsea cruise into FA Cup 4th round, Brentford stung by Plymouth
- Benin's women, pillars of voodoo celebrations
- Marmoush fires Frankfurt to victory amid Man City link
- Tram collision in France's Strasbourg injures 20
- New Red Bull football boss Klopp in stands for Paris FC match
- German far-right outlines radical programme as protesters rally
- Shami returns to India squad for England T20s after year absence
- Atalanta miss chance to top Serie A with Udinese stalemate
- Syria, Lebanon pledge firm ties after years of tensions
- De Mevius and Brabec take Dakar sixth stage honours
- Ukraine says questioning POWs it claims are North Koreans
- France hands over second army base in Chad amid withdrawal
- LA fires expand as winds forecast to pick up
- De Mevius, Brabec, take Dakar sixth stage honours
- Sudan army says enters key paramilitary-held Al-Jazira state capital
BCC | -1.31% | 115.88 | $ | |
SCS | -3.01% | 10.97 | $ | |
NGG | -3.3% | 56.13 | $ | |
RIO | 0.36% | 58.84 | $ | |
GSK | -1.99% | 33.09 | $ | |
BCE | -2.92% | 22.96 | $ | |
CMSD | -0.65% | 23.25 | $ | |
CMSC | -0.79% | 22.92 | $ | |
JRI | -1.16% | 12.08 | $ | |
RBGPF | 100% | 60.49 | $ | |
BTI | -2.34% | 35.9 | $ | |
VOD | -1.99% | 8.05 | $ | |
BP | 0.54% | 31.29 | $ | |
AZN | 0.64% | 67.01 | $ | |
RYCEF | -0.42% | 7.07 | $ | |
RELX | -0.86% | 46.37 | $ |
From soup stock to supercrop: Japan shows off its seaweed savvy
Seaweed has long been a staple food in Japan, but the chunky, slimy kelp hauled into fisherman Ryoichi Kigawa's boat is also starting to attract international attention for its potential as an eco-friendly supercrop.
Research into new applications for the marine plant -- from carbon absorption to reducing methane emissions from cattle -- is flourishing, and countries are looking to Asia's seaweed savvy to develop their own industries.
Most of the kelp harvested by Kigawa and his colleagues at their port in Yokohama is sold to be boiled in soup stock and added to healthy salads.
But some will go to projects run by the organisation Sachiumi Heroes "to preserve the ecosystem and tackle global warming", said the group's founder, Tatsunori Tomimoto.
"The Japanese have a history of eating seaweed, but we haven't ever really thought of farming it from an environmental or ecological point of view," he told AFP.
That is now changing, and Sachiumi Heroes is one of several new initiatives in Japan, from fisheries selling "blue carbon" credits to efforts to restore wild seaweed forests.
The brown strands of kelp take just four months to grow long and thick, and are then pulled up and cut from ropes submerged in the harbour.
They are washed and dried, with some chopped up to be sent to businesses, including green tea plantation Matoba-en, which uses it as organic fertiliser.
Studies have found that seaweed can help plants grow faster and stronger, and farmer Ryutaro Matoba is excited to see the benefits on his land in nearby Saitama.
"It will take two or three years before we start seeing the effect of the seaweed fertiliser on the quality of tea," he said, inspecting the tips of the bright bushes.
"But I can already feel the difference when I touch the soil, it feels softer now."
- 'Huge potential' -
Sachiumi Heroes also provides kelp to an aquarium to feed sea turtles, and to a livestock farm where it is added to cow feed in a bid to make their burps less planet-warming.
A 2021 study by the University of California, Davis found that replacing a small part of a cow's diet with a type of red seaweed reduced methane emissions by over 80 percent.
Tomimoto's organisation has even ventured into beauty treatments -- selling seaweed to bathhouses to put in their tubs, and to cosmetics company Lush to make bath bombs.
Overseas interest has grown quickly, "especially in the past two years", he said.
British researcher Henry Alexander is studying seaweed in Japan and other countries including South Korea and Canada, "with the aim of bringing that learning back to the UK".
"We don't yet have a significant seaweed farming industry," said Alexander, whose work is funded by a Nuffield Farming Scholarship.
"But in Asia they've been growing seaweed for hundreds of years, and growing it at a commercial scale since the 1950s."
With its long coastline and cold water, which helps seaweed grow faster, Britain has "huge potential" to produce more seaweed for human and animal consumption, he said.
That could take pressure off the land and create jobs, while allowing the nation to explore the environmental benefits, from carbon capture to deacidifying water.
- Blue carbon -
The world's seaweed industry doubled in size between 2005 and 2015, according to the UN Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO).
"It's a big deal. People love it," said Simon Funge-Smith, the FAO's senior fishery officer.
"People outside of Asia are now getting familiar with seaweed and looking to get hold of it."
The region accounts for the vast majority of seaweed production -- especially China and Indonesia, where it is farmed on an industrial scale for products including gels and thickeners.
One oft-touted use is in carbon offset projects, which take advantage of how quick-growing seaweed can rapidly absorb carbon dioxide.
Japan began a nationwide "J Blue Credit" scheme in 2020, with 16 of the 21 demonstration projects involving seaweed, including at Kansai and Kobe airports, where the runways are surrounded by water.
But despite a rush by governments and companies to fund such schemes, scientists have warned that there may not be enough ocean space to remove significant quantities of CO2 from the air.
And rising water temperatures are already making seaweed farming more difficult in countries like Japan, fuelling a push to cultivate more hardy strains.
Funge-Smith warns there is plenty of hype around seaweed and cautions about the "need to apply a bit of common sense".
But he sees potential in mass offshore farming and expects the field to continue developing.
"We're farming a handful of species, basically, out of hundreds of species that are out there," he said.
"It's an area where there's lots of research going on, lots of interest to try and find these applications, and who knows what we're going to turn up."
Th.Berger--AMWN