Could Kelp Aquaculture Have a Future in California? A State Policy Briefing Book

Seaweed farming is the fastest growing aquaculture industry in the U.S., with kelp accounting for much of the sector. Yet the industry faces a multitude of roadblocks in California that have prevented successful expansion of the industry in productive waters and a wide-open market. The purpose of th...

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Main Author: Wallace, Kaira
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:unknown
Published: eScholarship, University of California 2022
Subjects:
Online Access:https://escholarship.org/uc/item/77n5g6r7
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spelling ftcdlib:oai:escholarship.org:ark:/13030/qt77n5g6r7 2023-05-15T17:52:02+02:00 Could Kelp Aquaculture Have a Future in California? A State Policy Briefing Book Wallace, Kaira 2022-01-01 application/pdf https://escholarship.org/uc/item/77n5g6r7 unknown eScholarship, University of California qt77n5g6r7 https://escholarship.org/uc/item/77n5g6r7 public article 2022 ftcdlib 2022-11-07T18:34:16Z Seaweed farming is the fastest growing aquaculture industry in the U.S., with kelp accounting for much of the sector. Yet the industry faces a multitude of roadblocks in California that have prevented successful expansion of the industry in productive waters and a wide-open market. The purpose of this policy briefing document is to bring together relevant information about kelp aquaculture in California, to succinctly summarize and analyze it in an accessible way, and to provide a variety of solutions to the barriers the activity has faced thus far. This document can act as a comprehensive guide for those interested in the topic, including, but not limited to, members of the public, state policymakers and decision makers, prospective kelp aquaculture farmers, kelp companies, or other relevant organizations. A StoryMap web page version of this report is also available online that acts as an overarching look at this issue for those more visually inclined. It can be found here.Kelp aquaculture is an important topic in relation to climate change, ecosystem health, regenerative agriculture, and sustainability generally. Some of the many potential benefits of cultivating kelp in the ocean include local buffering of ocean acidification, absorption of excess nitrogen and phosphate, creation of habitat, carbon drawdown, buffering wave action, and creation of climate resilient jobs. Farming kelp requires no fertilizers, pesticides, or freshwater, and can grow up to 18 inches in a single day under the right conditions. Kelp is already used in a variety of products such as food, fertilizers, cosmetics, bioplastics, animal feed, biofuels, and medicines.Despite global demand for kelp increasing every year, and states like Maine and Alaska rapidly expanding farm production, California has fallen far behind in the nascent industry. The kelp aquaculture industry in the state faces obstacles such as a complex permitting process, inferior cost-competitiveness, negative social license, absence of marine spatial planning, and ... Article in Journal/Newspaper Ocean acidification Alaska University of California: eScholarship
institution Open Polar
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description Seaweed farming is the fastest growing aquaculture industry in the U.S., with kelp accounting for much of the sector. Yet the industry faces a multitude of roadblocks in California that have prevented successful expansion of the industry in productive waters and a wide-open market. The purpose of this policy briefing document is to bring together relevant information about kelp aquaculture in California, to succinctly summarize and analyze it in an accessible way, and to provide a variety of solutions to the barriers the activity has faced thus far. This document can act as a comprehensive guide for those interested in the topic, including, but not limited to, members of the public, state policymakers and decision makers, prospective kelp aquaculture farmers, kelp companies, or other relevant organizations. A StoryMap web page version of this report is also available online that acts as an overarching look at this issue for those more visually inclined. It can be found here.Kelp aquaculture is an important topic in relation to climate change, ecosystem health, regenerative agriculture, and sustainability generally. Some of the many potential benefits of cultivating kelp in the ocean include local buffering of ocean acidification, absorption of excess nitrogen and phosphate, creation of habitat, carbon drawdown, buffering wave action, and creation of climate resilient jobs. Farming kelp requires no fertilizers, pesticides, or freshwater, and can grow up to 18 inches in a single day under the right conditions. Kelp is already used in a variety of products such as food, fertilizers, cosmetics, bioplastics, animal feed, biofuels, and medicines.Despite global demand for kelp increasing every year, and states like Maine and Alaska rapidly expanding farm production, California has fallen far behind in the nascent industry. The kelp aquaculture industry in the state faces obstacles such as a complex permitting process, inferior cost-competitiveness, negative social license, absence of marine spatial planning, and ...
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Wallace, Kaira
spellingShingle Wallace, Kaira
Could Kelp Aquaculture Have a Future in California? A State Policy Briefing Book
author_facet Wallace, Kaira
author_sort Wallace, Kaira
title Could Kelp Aquaculture Have a Future in California? A State Policy Briefing Book
title_short Could Kelp Aquaculture Have a Future in California? A State Policy Briefing Book
title_full Could Kelp Aquaculture Have a Future in California? A State Policy Briefing Book
title_fullStr Could Kelp Aquaculture Have a Future in California? A State Policy Briefing Book
title_full_unstemmed Could Kelp Aquaculture Have a Future in California? A State Policy Briefing Book
title_sort could kelp aquaculture have a future in california? a state policy briefing book
publisher eScholarship, University of California
publishDate 2022
url https://escholarship.org/uc/item/77n5g6r7
genre Ocean acidification
Alaska
genre_facet Ocean acidification
Alaska
op_relation qt77n5g6r7
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op_rights public
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