Low-Carbon Seaweed-Based Product Road Maps

Development gaps and needs

Science

The decarbonization case for this pathway cannot be built without a reliable supply of low-cost biomass and better understanding of the impacts on livestock performance, which requires resolving the production consistency, and impact testing gaps addressed in this subsection.

Seaweed biomass supply

There is not enough seaweed in production to support animal feed research and commercial development.

The animal feed sector requires reliable, high-volume biomass supply to conduct meaningful trials, attract investment, and bring products to scale. Current global production is dominated by a small number of species grown for food and hydrocolloid markets; dedicated feed-grade supply chains barely exist in most producing regions. Without a stable biomass base, downstream product development stalls regardless of market demand (World Bank, 2023). See the chapter “Cultivation and Drying Considerations” for more information.

Genomic and phenotypic diversity

Lack of intentional species selection constrains consistent production of high-quality products

Seaweed’s nutritional and bioactive composition varies considerably across species, geographies, seasonality, and maturity. Most commercial feed products are made from whatever biomass is available rather than strains chosen for end-use performance. This produces variable product quality and makes it difficult to demonstrate consistent efficacy to buyers (e.g., Halfdanarson et al., 2019; Emblemsvåg et al., 2020). Investment in genotype-phenotype mapping and systematic species/strain and site selection criteria would enable more reliable production and improve cost-competitiveness with established alternatives (González-Mesa et al., 2023).

Characterizing and mapping seaweed chemical composition

The specific compounds in seaweed responsible for improving livestock health and productivity have not been identified with sufficient precision to support product development or regulatory approval Seaweed-based feed products improve animal health, growth rates, and immune function across multiple studies, but the active compounds driving those effects are largely unknown. Without knowing which compounds matter — and in what concentrations — product developers cannot target them through cultivation or processing, and regulators cannot set meaningful approval criteria.  ‘Omics approaches (e.g., genomics, transcriptomics, metabolomics) using strains with and without candidate genes that produce the chemical compound of interest can validate chemical characterization (World Bank Report, 2023).

Impacts on livestock performance

There is not enough long-term evidence on the effects of seaweed-based feed on livestock health, productivity, and product quality to satisfy buyer or regulatory requirements.

Most existing trials are short-term, conducted at laboratory or pilot scale, and focused on a small number of livestock species. The lack of long-term data reduces buyer confidence and prevents regulators from setting safety limits or validating health claims (González-Mesa et al., 2023). Long-term commercial trials are needed to address this barrier.

The optimal inclusion rate for seaweed in feed has not been established systematically across livestock types, species, and seasons

Short-term performance data indicates that the right inclusion level varies by livestock species, seaweed species, active compound concentration, and season. In some cases, too much inclusion of seaweed causes weight loss, reduced palatability, or mineral overload in some species. Dose-response studies across the main livestock categories (ruminants, swine, poultry, aquaculture) would produce the inclusion-rate guidance that product developers and feed formulators currently lack (Costa et al., 2021).

Public health

The extent to which seaweed contaminants — iodine, heavy metals, marine biotoxins — accumulate in livestock products for human consumption is not established

Seaweed can contain high concentrations of iodine, heavy metals (e.g., lead, arsenic, mercury, cadmium), and marine biotoxins, yet there is limited data on the magnitude to which these compounds accumulate in livestock fed with seaweed and subsequently products for human consumption (FAO, 2024). Clinical health trials need to be done to confirm that products are safe for indirect human consumption.

The decarbonization case for this pathway cannot be built without a reliable supply of low-cost biomass and better understanding of the impacts on livestock performance, which requires resolving the production consistency, and impact testing gaps addressed in this subsection.

Seaweed biomass supply

There is not enough seaweed in production to support animal feed research and commercial development. The animal feed sector requires reliable, high-volume biomass supply to conduct meaningful trials, attract investment, and bring products to scale. Current global production is dominated by a small number of species grown for food and hydrocolloid markets; dedicated feed-grade supply chains barely exist in most producing regions. Without a stable biomass base, downstream product development stalls regardless of market demand (World Bank, 2023). See the chapter "Cultivation and Drying Considerations" for more information.

Genomic and phenotypic diversity

Lack of intentional species selection constrains consistent production of high-quality products Seaweed's nutritional and bioactive composition varies considerably across species, geographies, seasonality, and maturity. Most commercial feed products are made from whatever biomass is available rather than strains chosen for end-use performance. This produces variable product quality and makes it difficult to demonstrate consistent efficacy to buyers (e.g., Halfdanarson et al., 2019; Emblemsvåg et al., 2020). Investment in genotype-phenotype mapping and systematic species/strain and site selection criteria would enable more reliable production and improve cost-competitiveness with established alternatives (González-Mesa et al., 2023).

Characterizing and mapping seaweed chemical composition

The specific compounds in seaweed responsible for improving livestock health and productivity have not been identified with sufficient precision to support product development or regulatory approval Seaweed-based feed products improve animal health, growth rates, and immune function across multiple studies, but the active compounds driving those effects are largely unknown. Without knowing which compounds matter — and in what concentrations — product developers cannot target them through cultivation or processing, and regulators cannot set meaningful approval criteria.  ‘Omics approaches (e.g., genomics, transcriptomics, metabolomics) using strains with and without candidate genes that produce the chemical compound of interest can validate chemical characterization (World Bank Report, 2023).

Impacts on livestock performance

There is not enough long-term evidence on the effects of seaweed-based feed on livestock health, productivity, and product quality to satisfy buyer or regulatory requirements. Most existing trials are short-term, conducted at laboratory or pilot scale, and focused on a small number of livestock species. The lack of long-term data reduces buyer confidence and prevents regulators from setting safety limits or validating health claims (González-Mesa et al., 2023). Long-term commercial trials are needed to address this barrier. The optimal inclusion rate for seaweed in feed has not been established systematically across livestock types, species, and seasons Short-term performance data indicates that the right inclusion level varies by livestock species, seaweed species, active compound concentration, and season. In some cases, too much inclusion of seaweed causes weight loss, reduced palatability, or mineral overload in some species. Dose-response studies across the main livestock categories (ruminants, swine, poultry, aquaculture) would produce the inclusion-rate guidance that product developers and feed formulators currently lack (Costa et al., 2021).

Public health

The extent to which seaweed contaminants — iodine, heavy metals, marine biotoxins — accumulate in livestock products for human consumption is not established Seaweed can contain high concentrations of iodine, heavy metals (e.g., lead, arsenic, mercury, cadmium), and marine biotoxins, yet there is limited data on the magnitude to which these compounds accumulate in livestock fed with seaweed and subsequently products for human consumption (FAO, 2024). Clinical health trials need to be done to confirm that products are safe for indirect human consumption.
 

Seaweed biomass supply

There is not enough seaweed in production to support animal feed research and commercial development. The animal feed sector requires reliable, high-volume biomass supply to conduct meaningful trials, attract investment, and bring products to scale. Current global production is dominated by a small number of species grown for food and hydrocolloid markets; dedicated feed-grade supply chains barely exist in most producing regions. Without a stable biomass base, downstream product development stalls regardless of market demand (World Bank, 2023). See the chapter "Cultivation and Drying Considerations" for more information.

Genomic and phenotypic diversity

Lack of intentional species selection constrains consistent production of high-quality products Seaweed's nutritional and bioactive composition varies considerably across species, geographies, seasonality, and maturity. Most commercial feed products are made from whatever biomass is available rather than strains chosen for end-use performance. This produces variable product quality and makes it difficult to demonstrate consistent efficacy to buyers (e.g., Halfdanarson et al., 2019; Emblemsvåg et al., 2020). Investment in genotype-phenotype mapping and systematic species/strain and site selection criteria would enable more reliable production and improve cost-competitiveness with established alternatives (González-Mesa et al., 2023).

Characterizing and mapping seaweed chemical composition

The specific compounds in seaweed responsible for improving livestock health and productivity have not been identified with sufficient precision to support product development or regulatory approval Seaweed-based feed products improve animal health, growth rates, and immune function across multiple studies, but the active compounds driving those effects are largely unknown. Without knowing which compounds matter — and in what concentrations — product developers cannot target them through cultivation or processing, and regulators cannot set meaningful approval criteria.  ‘Omics approaches (e.g., genomics, transcriptomics, metabolomics) using strains with and without candidate genes that produce the chemical compound of interest can validate chemical characterization (World Bank Report, 2023).

Impacts on livestock performance

There is not enough long-term evidence on the effects of seaweed-based feed on livestock health, productivity, and product quality to satisfy buyer or regulatory requirements. Most existing trials are short-term, conducted at laboratory or pilot scale, and focused on a small number of livestock species. The lack of long-term data reduces buyer confidence and prevents regulators from setting safety limits or validating health claims (González-Mesa et al., 2023). Long-term commercial trials are needed to address this barrier. The optimal inclusion rate for seaweed in feed has not been established systematically across livestock types, species, and seasons Short-term performance data indicates that the right inclusion level varies by livestock species, seaweed species, active compound concentration, and season. In some cases, too much inclusion of seaweed causes weight loss, reduced palatability, or mineral overload in some species. Dose-response studies across the main livestock categories (ruminants, swine, poultry, aquaculture) would produce the inclusion-rate guidance that product developers and feed formulators currently lack (Costa et al., 2021).

Public health

The extent to which seaweed contaminants — iodine, heavy metals, marine biotoxins — accumulate in livestock products for human consumption is not established Seaweed can contain high concentrations of iodine, heavy metals (e.g., lead, arsenic, mercury, cadmium), and marine biotoxins, yet there is limited data on the magnitude to which these compounds accumulate in livestock fed with seaweed and subsequently products for human consumption (FAO, 2024). Clinical health trials need to be done to confirm that products are safe for indirect human consumption.
The decarbonization case for this pathway cannot be built without a reliable supply of low-cost biomass and better understanding of the impacts on livestock performance, which requires resolving the production consistency, and impact testing gaps addressed in this subsection.

Seaweed biomass supply

There is not enough seaweed in production to support animal feed research and commercial development. The animal feed sector requires reliable, high-volume biomass supply to conduct meaningful trials, attract investment, and bring products to scale. Current global production is dominated by a small number of species grown for food and hydrocolloid markets; dedicated feed-grade supply chains barely exist in most producing regions. Without a stable biomass base, downstream product development stalls regardless of market demand (World Bank, 2023). See the chapter "Cultivation and Drying Considerations" for more information.

Genomic and phenotypic diversity

Lack of intentional species selection constrains consistent production of high-quality products Seaweed's nutritional and bioactive composition varies considerably across species, geographies, seasonality, and maturity. Most commercial feed products are made from whatever biomass is available rather than strains chosen for end-use performance. This produces variable product quality and makes it difficult to demonstrate consistent efficacy to buyers (e.g., Halfdanarson et al., 2019; Emblemsvåg et al., 2020). Investment in genotype-phenotype mapping and systematic species/strain and site selection criteria would enable more reliable production and improve cost-competitiveness with established alternatives (González-Mesa et al., 2023).

Characterizing and mapping seaweed chemical composition

The specific compounds in seaweed responsible for improving livestock health and productivity have not been identified with sufficient precision to support product development or regulatory approval Seaweed-based feed products improve animal health, growth rates, and immune function across multiple studies, but the active compounds driving those effects are largely unknown. Without knowing which compounds matter — and in what concentrations — product developers cannot target them through cultivation or processing, and regulators cannot set meaningful approval criteria.  ‘Omics approaches (e.g., genomics, transcriptomics, metabolomics) using strains with and without candidate genes that produce the chemical compound of interest can validate chemical characterization (World Bank Report, 2023).

Impacts on livestock performance

There is not enough long-term evidence on the effects of seaweed-based feed on livestock health, productivity, and product quality to satisfy buyer or regulatory requirements. Most existing trials are short-term, conducted at laboratory or pilot scale, and focused on a small number of livestock species. The lack of long-term data reduces buyer confidence and prevents regulators from setting safety limits or validating health claims (González-Mesa et al., 2023). Long-term commercial trials are needed to address this barrier. The optimal inclusion rate for seaweed in feed has not been established systematically across livestock types, species, and seasons Short-term performance data indicates that the right inclusion level varies by livestock species, seaweed species, active compound concentration, and season. In some cases, too much inclusion of seaweed causes weight loss, reduced palatability, or mineral overload in some species. Dose-response studies across the main livestock categories (ruminants, swine, poultry, aquaculture) would produce the inclusion-rate guidance that product developers and feed formulators currently lack (Costa et al., 2021).

Public health

The extent to which seaweed contaminants — iodine, heavy metals, marine biotoxins — accumulate in livestock products for human consumption is not established Seaweed can contain high concentrations of iodine, heavy metals (e.g., lead, arsenic, mercury, cadmium), and marine biotoxins, yet there is limited data on the magnitude to which these compounds accumulate in livestock fed with seaweed and subsequently products for human consumption (FAO, 2024). Clinical health trials need to be done to confirm that products are safe for indirect human consumption.

Seaweed biomass supply

There is not enough seaweed in production to support animal feed research and commercial development. The animal feed sector requires reliable, high-volume biomass supply to conduct meaningful trials, attract investment, and bring products to scale. Current global production is dominated by a small number of species grown for food and hydrocolloid markets; dedicated feed-grade supply chains barely exist in most producing regions. Without a stable biomass base, downstream product development stalls regardless of market demand (World Bank, 2023). See the chapter "Cultivation and Drying Considerations" for more information.

Genomic and phenotypic diversity

Lack of intentional species selection constrains consistent production of high-quality products Seaweed's nutritional and bioactive composition varies considerably across species, geographies, seasonality, and maturity. Most commercial feed products are made from whatever biomass is available rather than strains chosen for end-use performance. This produces variable product quality and makes it difficult to demonstrate consistent efficacy to buyers (e.g., Halfdanarson et al., 2019; Emblemsvåg et al., 2020). Investment in genotype-phenotype mapping and systematic species/strain and site selection criteria would enable more reliable production and improve cost-competitiveness with established alternatives (González-Mesa et al., 2023).

Characterizing and mapping seaweed chemical composition

The specific compounds in seaweed responsible for improving livestock health and productivity have not been identified with sufficient precision to support product development or regulatory approval Seaweed-based feed products improve animal health, growth rates, and immune function across multiple studies, but the active compounds driving those effects are largely unknown. Without knowing which compounds matter — and in what concentrations — product developers cannot target them through cultivation or processing, and regulators cannot set meaningful approval criteria.  ‘Omics approaches (e.g., genomics, transcriptomics, metabolomics) using strains with and without candidate genes that produce the chemical compound of interest can validate chemical characterization (World Bank Report, 2023).

Impacts on livestock performance

There is not enough long-term evidence on the effects of seaweed-based feed on livestock health, productivity, and product quality to satisfy buyer or regulatory requirements. Most existing trials are short-term, conducted at laboratory or pilot scale, and focused on a small number of livestock species. The lack of long-term data reduces buyer confidence and prevents regulators from setting safety limits or validating health claims (González-Mesa et al., 2023). Long-term commercial trials are needed to address this barrier. The optimal inclusion rate for seaweed in feed has not been established systematically across livestock types, species, and seasons Short-term performance data indicates that the right inclusion level varies by livestock species, seaweed species, active compound concentration, and season. In some cases, too much inclusion of seaweed causes weight loss, reduced palatability, or mineral overload in some species. Dose-response studies across the main livestock categories (ruminants, swine, poultry, aquaculture) would produce the inclusion-rate guidance that product developers and feed formulators currently lack (Costa et al., 2021).

Public health

The extent to which seaweed contaminants — iodine, heavy metals, marine biotoxins — accumulate in livestock products for human consumption is not established Seaweed can contain high concentrations of iodine, heavy metals (e.g., lead, arsenic, mercury, cadmium), and marine biotoxins, yet there is limited data on the magnitude to which these compounds accumulate in livestock fed with seaweed and subsequently products for human consumption (FAO, 2024). Clinical health trials need to be done to confirm that products are safe for indirect human consumption.

Seaweed biomass supply

There is not enough seaweed in production to support animal feed research and commercial development. The animal feed sector requires reliable, high-volume biomass supply to conduct meaningful trials, attract investment, and bring products to scale. Current global production is dominated by a small number of species grown for food and hydrocolloid markets; dedicated feed-grade supply chains barely exist in most producing regions. Without a stable biomass base, downstream product development stalls regardless of market demand (World Bank, 2023).

Genomic and phenotypic diversity

Lack of intentional species selection constrains consistent production of high-quality products Seaweed's nutritional and bioactive composition varies considerably across species, geographies, seasonality, and maturity. Most commercial feed products are made from whatever biomass is available rather than strains chosen for end-use performance. This produces variable product quality and makes it difficult to demonstrate consistent efficacy to buyers (e.g., Halfdanarson et al., 2019; Emblemsvåg et al., 2020). Investment in genotype-phenotype mapping and systematic species/strain and site selection criteria would enable more reliable production and improve cost-competitiveness with established alternatives (González-Mesa et al., 2023).

Characterizing and mapping seaweed chemical composition

The specific compounds in seaweed responsible for improving livestock health and productivity have not been identified with sufficient precision to support product development or regulatory approval Seaweed-based feed products improve animal health, growth rates, and immune function across multiple studies, but the active compounds driving those effects are largely unknown. Without knowing which compounds matter — and in what concentrations — product developers cannot target them through cultivation or processing, and regulators cannot set meaningful approval criteria.  ‘Omics approaches (e.g., genomics, transcriptomics, metabolomics) using strains with and without candidate genes that produce the chemical compound of interest can validate chemical characterization (World Bank Report, 2023).

Impacts on livestock performance

There is not enough long-term evidence on the effects of seaweed-based feed on livestock health, productivity, and product quality to satisfy buyer or regulatory requirements. Most existing trials are short-term, conducted at laboratory or pilot scale, and focused on a small number of livestock species. The lack of long-term data reduces buyer confidence and prevents regulators from setting safety limits or validating health claims (González-Mesa et al., 2023). Long-term commercial trials are needed to address this barrier. The optimal inclusion rate for seaweed in feed has not been established systematically across livestock types, species, and seasons Short-term performance data indicates that the right inclusion level varies by livestock species, seaweed species, active compound concentration, and season. In some cases, too much inclusion of seaweed causes weight loss, reduced palatability, or mineral overload in some species. Dose-response studies across the main livestock categories (ruminants, swine, poultry, aquaculture) would produce the inclusion-rate guidance that product developers and feed formulators currently lack (Costa et al., 2021).

Public health

The extent to which seaweed contaminants — iodine, heavy metals, marine biotoxins — accumulate in livestock products for human consumption is not established Seaweed can contain high concentrations of iodine, heavy metals (e.g., lead, arsenic, mercury, cadmium), and marine biotoxins, yet there is limited data on the magnitude to which these compounds accumulate in livestock fed with seaweed and subsequently products for human consumption (FAO, 2024). Clinical health trials need to be done to confirm that products are safe for indirect human consumption.

Seaweed biomass supply

There is not enough seaweed in production to support animal feed research and commercial development. The animal feed sector requires reliable, high-volume biomass supply to conduct meaningful trials, attract investment, and bring products to scale. Current global production is dominated by a small number of species grown for food and hydrocolloid markets; dedicated feed-grade supply chains barely exist in most producing regions. Without a stable biomass base, downstream product development stalls regardless of market demand (World Bank, 2023).

Genomic and phenotypic diversity

Lack of intentional species selection constrains consistent production of high-quality products Seaweed's nutritional and bioactive composition varies considerably across species, geographies, seasonality, and maturity. Most commercial feed products are made from whatever biomass is available rather than strains chosen for end-use performance. This produces variable product quality and makes it difficult to demonstrate consistent efficacy to buyers (e.g., Halfdanarson et al., 2019; Emblemsvåg et al., 2020). Investment in genotype-phenotype mapping and systematic species/strain and site selection criteria would enable more reliable production and improve cost-competitiveness with established alternatives (González-Mesa et al., 2023).

Characterizing and mapping seaweed chemical composition

The specific compounds in seaweed responsible for improving livestock health and productivity have not been identified with sufficient precision to support product development or regulatory approval Seaweed-based feed products improve animal health, growth rates, and immune function across multiple studies, but the active compounds driving those effects are largely unknown. Without knowing which compounds matter — and in what concentrations — product developers cannot target them through cultivation or processing, and regulators cannot set meaningful approval criteria.  ‘Omics approaches (e.g., genomics, transcriptomics, metabolomics) using strains with and without candidate genes that produce the chemical compound of interest can validate chemical characterization (World Bank Report, 2023).

Impacts on livestock performance

There is not enough long-term evidence on the effects of seaweed-based feed on livestock health, productivity, and product quality to satisfy buyer or regulatory requirements. Most existing trials are short-term, conducted at laboratory or pilot scale, and focused on a small number of livestock species. The lack of long-term data reduces buyer confidence and prevents regulators from setting safety limits or validating health claims (González-Mesa et al., 2023). Long-term commercial trials are needed to address this barrier. The optimal inclusion rate for seaweed in feed has not been established systematically across livestock types, species, and seasons. Short-term performance data indicates that the right inclusion level varies by livestock species, seaweed species, active compound concentration, and season. In some cases, too much inclusion of seaweed causes weight loss, reduced palatability, or mineral overload in some species. Dose-response studies across the main livestock categories (ruminants, swine, poultry, aquaculture) would produce the inclusion-rate guidance that product developers and feed formulators currently lack (Costa et al., 2021).

Public health

The extent to which seaweed contaminants — iodine, heavy metals, marine biotoxins — accumulate in livestock products for human consumption is not established. Seaweed can contain high concentrations of iodine, heavy metals (e.g., lead, arsenic, mercury, cadmium), and marine biotoxins, yet there is limited data on the magnitude to which these compounds accumulate in livestock fed with seaweed and subsequently products for human consumption (FAO, 2024). Clinical health trials need to be done to confirm that products are safe for indirect human consumption.

Projects from Ocean CDR Community

Processing and Engineering

The gaps in this subsection determine the processing carbon intensity of seaweed feed products: post-harvest drying is the single largest contributor to the product lifecycle footprint, and until lower-carbon alternatives are commercially viable, the net climate benefit per ton of feed applied is materially reduced

Post-harvest drying is the largest single contributor to the carbon footprint of seaweed-based feed products and raises costs substantially

Drying seaweed for animal feed makes up a substantial portion of products’ carbon footprints. Co-locating renewable or waste energy with processing operations, and developing lower-energy drying alternatives, are priority technical targets. See the “Cultivation and Drying Considerations” chapter for more information.

Extraction methods are not optimized for yield, energy use or product stability

Conventional extraction relies on heat, solvents, acid, and time, which degrades heat-sensitive bioactive compounds and adds energy cost. Novel approaches — enzyme-assisted, ultrasound-assisted, and subcritical water extraction — can improve yields and reduce solvent use, but remain at laboratory scale (TRL 1–3) for most seaweed feed applications. Comparative efficacy studies are needed to test and develop these extraction technologies that can produce high-quality and stable products with lower environmental impact, as well as development of seaweed-specific extraction ingredients (e.g., EAE; Garcia-Vaquero et al., 2017; Ahmed et al., 2023).

The gaps in this subsection determine the processing carbon intensity of seaweed feed products: post-harvest drying is the single largest contributor to the product lifecycle footprint, and until lower-carbon alternatives are commercially viable, the net climate benefit per ton of feed applied is materially reduced Post-harvest drying is the largest single contributor to the carbon footprint of seaweed-based feed products and raises costs substantially Drying seaweed for animal feed makes up a substantial portion of products’ carbon footprints. Co-locating renewable or waste energy with processing operations, and developing lower-energy drying alternatives, are priority technical targets. See the “Cultivation and Drying Considerations” chapter for more information. Extraction methods are not optimized for yield, energy use or product stability Conventional extraction relies on heat, solvents, acid, and time, which degrades heat-sensitive bioactive compounds and adds energy cost. Novel approaches — enzyme-assisted, ultrasound-assisted, and subcritical water extraction — can improve yields and reduce solvent use, but remain at laboratory scale (TRL 1–3) for most seaweed feed applications. Comparative efficacy studies are needed to test and develop these extraction technologies that can produce high-quality and stable products with lower environmental impact, as well as development of seaweed-specific extraction ingredients (e.g., EAE; Garcia-Vaquero et al., 2017; Ahmed et al., 2023).
Post-harvest drying is the largest single contributor to the carbon footprint of seaweed-based feed products and raises costs substantially Drying seaweed for animal feed makes up a substantial portion of products’ carbon footprints. Co-locating renewable or waste energy with processing operations, and developing lower-energy drying alternatives, are priority technical targets. See the “Cultivation and Drying Considerations” chapter for more information. Extraction methods are not optimized for yield, energy use or product stability Conventional extraction relies on heat, solvents, acid, and time, which degrades heat-sensitive bioactive compounds and adds energy cost. Novel approaches — enzyme-assisted, ultrasound-assisted, and subcritical water extraction — can improve yields and reduce solvent use, but remain at laboratory scale (TRL 1–3) for most seaweed feed applications. Comparative efficacy studies are needed to test and develop these extraction technologies that can produce high-quality and stable products with lower environmental impact, as well as development of seaweed-specific extraction ingredients (e.g., EAE; Garcia-Vaquero et al., 2017; Ahmed et al., 2023).
Post-harvest drying is the largest single contributor to the carbon footprint of seaweed-based feed products and raises costs substantially Drying seaweed for animal feed makes up a substantial portion of products’ carbon footprints. Co-locating renewable or waste energy with processing operations, and developing lower-energy drying alternatives, are priority technical targets. See the “Crosscutting: Cultivation Considerations” chapter for more information. Extraction methods are not optimized  for yield, energy use or product stability. Conventional extraction relies on heat, solvents, acid, and time, which degrades heat-sensitive bioactive compounds and adds energy cost. Novel approaches — enzyme-assisted, ultrasound-assisted, and subcritical water extraction — can improve yields and reduce solvent use, but remain at laboratory scale (TRL 1–3) for most seaweed feed applications. Comparative efficacy studies are needed to test and develop these extraction technologies that can produce high-quality and stable products with lower environmental impact, as well as development of seaweed-specific extraction ingredients (e.g., EAE; Garcia-Vaquero et al., 2017; Ahmed et al., 2023).
Post-harvest drying is the largest single contributor to the carbon footprint of seaweed-based feed products and raises costs substantially Drying seaweed for animal feed makes up a substantial portion of products’ carbon footprints. Co-locating renewable or waste energy with processing operations, and developing lower-energy drying alternatives, are priority technical targets. See the “Crosscutting: Cultivation Considerations” chapter for more information. Extraction methods are not optimized  for yield, energy use or product stability. Conventional extraction relies on heat, solvents, acid, and time, which degrades heat-sensitive bioactive compounds and adds energy cost. Novel approaches — enzyme-assisted, ultrasound-assisted, and subcritical water extraction — can improve yields and reduce solvent use, but remain at laboratory scale (TRL 1–3) for most seaweed feed applications. Comparative efficacy studies are needed to test and develop these extraction technologies that can produce high-quality and stable products with lower environmental impact, as well as development of seaweed-specific extraction ingredients (e.g., EAE; Garcia-Vaquero et al., 2017; Ahmed et al., 2023).

Projects from Ocean CDR Community

Markets and Investments

The gaps in this subsection reflect on the challenge of determining whether the full lifecycle climate benefit of seaweed-based feed can be quantified, including land-use displacement of terrestrial feed crops, and sequestration during cultivation.

Existing lifecycle assessments do not capture the full climate impact of seaweed-based feed products as well as incumbent products, which limits investor confidence and the policy case for the sector
Existing assessments omit carbon sequestration during cultivation, emissions at product end-of-life, comparative land-use impacts against terrestrial incumbents, and chemical product avoidance, leaving the realistic mitigation case unresolved. Expanding LCA programs to cover full product lifecycles with standardized methodologies would strengthen both the investment and policy case (Halfdanarson et al., 2019; Chaurasiya et al., 2026).

The gaps in this subsection reflect on the challenge of determining whether the full lifecycle climate benefit of seaweed-based feed can be quantified, including land-use displacement of terrestrial feed crops, and sequestration during cultivation. Existing lifecycle assessments do not capture the full climate impact of seaweed-based feed products as well as incumbent products, which limits investor confidence and the policy case for the sector Existing assessments omit carbon sequestration during cultivation, emissions at product end-of-life, comparative land-use impacts against terrestrial incumbents, and chemical product avoidance, leaving the realistic mitigation case unresolved. Expanding LCA programs to cover full product lifecycles with standardized methodologies would strengthen both the investment and policy case (Halfdanarson et al., 2019; Chaurasiya et al., 2026).
The gaps in this subsection reflect on the challenge of determining whether the full lifecycle climate benefit of seaweed-based feed, including land-use displacement of terrestrial feed crops, and sequestration during cultivation, the improved quantification of which supports both private financing and policy inclusion. Existing lifecycle assessments do not capture the full climate impact of seaweed-based feed products as well as incumbent products, which limits investor confidence and the policy case for the sector Existing assessments omit carbon sequestration during cultivation, emissions at product end-of-life, comparative land-use impacts against terrestrial incumbents, and chemical product avoidance, leaving the realistic mitigation case unresolved. Expanding LCA programs to cover full product lifecycles with standardized methodologies would strengthen both the investment and policy case (Halfdanarson et al., 2019; Chaurasiya et al., 2026).
Existing lifecycle assessments do not capture the full climate impact of seaweed-based feed products as well as incumbent products, which limits investor confidence and the policy case for the sector Existing assessments omit carbon sequestration during cultivation, emissions at product end-of-life, comparative land-use impacts against terrestrial incumbents, and chemical product avoidance, leaving the realistic mitigation case unresolved. Expanding LCA programs to cover full product lifecycles with standardized methodologies would strengthen both the investment and policy case (Halfdanarson et al., 2019; Chaurasiya et al., 2026).

Projects from Ocean CDR Community

Social License and Community Acceptance

The gap in this subsection reflects a practical adoption barrier: without peer-verified, long-term efficacy data from comparable farm operations, the feed producers and nutritionists who control purchasing decisions will not adopt seaweed-based products at the volumes needed to generate aggregate emission reductions at scale.

Buyers — feed producers, farmers, and nutritionists — lack the evidence and direct experience needed to adopt seaweed-based products with confidence

Commercial feed buyers base adoption decisions on peer experience and evidence from comparable operations. Many have used synthetic products for decades and are cautious about switching without data from their own  or peer farms (FAO, 2024). Demonstration sites and public awareness campaigns highlighting available data can open more communities to seaweed-based animal feed and increase market demand.

The gap in this subsection reflects a practical adoption barrier: without peer-verified, long-term efficacy data from comparable farm operations, the feed producers and nutritionists who control purchasing decisions will not adopt seaweed-based products at the volumes needed to generate aggregate emission reductions at scale. Buyers — feed producers, farmers, and nutritionists — lack the evidence and direct experience needed to adopt seaweed-based products with confidence Commercial feed buyers base adoption decisions on peer experience and evidence from comparable operations. Many have used synthetic products for decades and are cautious about switching without data from their own  or peer farms (FAO, 2024). Demonstration sites and public awareness campaigns highlighting available data can open more communities to seaweed-based animal feed and increase market demand.
Buyers — feed producers, farmers, and nutritionists — lack the evidence and direct experience needed to adopt seaweed-based products with confidence Commercial feed buyers base adoption decisions on peer experience and evidence from comparable operations. Many have used synthetic products for decades and are cautious about switching without data from their own  or peer farms (FAO, 2024). Demonstration sites and public awareness campaigns highlighting available data can open more communities to seaweed-based animal feed and increase market demand.
Buyers — feed producers, farmers, and nutritionists — lack the evidence and direct experience needed to adopt seaweed-based products with confidence Commercial feed buyers base adoption decisions on peer experience and evidence from comparable operations. Many have used synthetic products for decades and are cautious about switching without data from their own  or peer farms. (FAO, 2024). Demonstration sites and public awareness campaigns highlighting available data can open more communities to seaweed-based animal feed and increase market demand.
Buyers — feed producers, farmers, and nutritionists — lack the evidence and direct experience needed to adopt seaweed-based products with confidence Commercial feed buyers base adoption decisions on peer experience and evidence from comparable operations. Many have used synthetic products for decades and are cautious about switching without data from their own  or peer farms. (FAO, 2024). Demonstration sites and public awareness campaigns highlighting available data can open more communities to seaweed-based animal feed and increase market demand.

Projects from Ocean CDR Community

Policy and Governance

The gaps in this subsection reflect that seaweed-based feed products can be sold across major markets without harmonized contaminant limits and mandatory composition disclosure. Cross-border trade will remain restricted and the addressable market for climate-relevant volumes of feed products is constrained.

Regulatory frameworks for seaweed in animal feed are fragmented across jurisdictions, inconsistently applied, and lack a common international standard

National contaminant thresholds for arsenic, cadmium, iodine, and mercury differ substantially across the EU, US, Canada, China, and Australia and were not set specifically for seaweed. No Codex standard for seaweed in animal feed exists, meaning there is no internationally recognized benchmark that producers can target or that regulators can reference when setting national rules (FAO, 2022; Cottier-Cook et al., 2023).

Absent transparency requirements on composition and contaminant limits create market opacity and impede buyer trust

In most markets, producers have no obligation to disclose active compound concentrations, contaminant levels, species identity, or harvest source — so buyers and regulators cannot compare products or verify safety claims (Morais et al., 2020). Canada’s mandatory iodine labeling requirements  is one of the few rules that cover all livestock feed materials. International production guidelines with mandatory composition reporting, modeled on existing food safety frameworks, would establish the transparency the market requires.

The gaps in this subsection reflect that seaweed-based feed products can be sold across major markets without harmonized contaminant limits and mandatory composition disclosure. Cross-border trade will remain restricted and the addressable market for climate-relevant volumes of feed products is constrained. Regulatory frameworks for seaweed in animal feed are fragmented across jurisdictions, inconsistently applied, and lack a common international standard National contaminant thresholds for arsenic, cadmium, iodine, and mercury differ substantially across the EU, US, Canada, China, and Australia and were not set specifically for seaweed. No Codex standard for seaweed in animal feed exists, meaning there is no internationally recognized benchmark that producers can target or that regulators can reference when setting national rules (FAO, 2022; Cottier-Cook et al., 2023). Absent transparency requirements on composition and contaminant limits create market opacity and impede buyer trust In most markets, producers have no obligation to disclose active compound concentrations, contaminant levels, species identity, or harvest source — so buyers and regulators cannot compare products or verify safety claims (Morais et al., 2020). Canada’s mandatory iodine labeling requirements  is one of the few rules that cover all livestock feed materials. International production guidelines with mandatory composition reporting, modeled on existing food safety frameworks, would establish the transparency the market requires.
Regulatory frameworks for seaweed in animal feed are fragmented across jurisdictions, inconsistently applied, and lack a common international standard National contaminant thresholds for arsenic, cadmium, iodine, and mercury differ substantially across the EU, US, Canada, China, and Australia and were not set specifically for seaweed. No Codex standard for seaweed in animal feed exists, meaning there is no internationally recognized benchmark that producers can target or that regulators can reference when setting national rules (FAO, 2022; Cottier-Cook et al., 2023). Absent transparency requirements on composition and contaminant limits create market opacity and impede buyer trust In most markets, producers have no obligation to disclose active compound concentrations, contaminant levels, species identity, or harvest source — so buyers and regulators cannot compare products or verify safety claims (Morais et al., 2020). Canada’s mandatory iodine labeling requirements  is one of the few rules that cover all livestock feed materials. International production guidelines with mandatory composition reporting, modeled on existing food safety frameworks, would establish the transparency the market requires.
Regulatory frameworks for seaweed in animal feed are fragmented across jurisdictions, inconsistently applied, and lack a common international standard National contaminant thresholds for arsenic, cadmium, iodine, and mercury differ substantially across the EU, US, Canada, China, and Australia and were not set specifically for seaweed. No Codex standard for seaweed in animal feed exists, meaning there is no internationally recognized benchmark that producers can target or that regulators can reference when setting national rules. (FAO, 2022; Cottier-Cook et al., 2023). Absent transparency requirements on composition and contaminant limits create market opacity and impede buyer trust In most markets, producers have no obligation to disclose active compound concentrations, contaminant levels, species identity, or harvest source — so buyers and regulators cannot compare products or verify safety claims (Morais et al., 2020). Canada’s mandatory iodine labeling requirements  is one of the few rules that cover all livestock feed materials. International production guidelines with mandatory composition reporting, modeled on existing food safety frameworks, would establish the transparency the market requires.
Regulatory frameworks for seaweed in animal feed are fragmented across jurisdictions, inconsistently applied, and lack a common international standard National contaminant thresholds for arsenic, cadmium, iodine, and mercury differ substantially across the EU, US, Canada, China, and Australia and were not set specifically for seaweed. No Codex standard for seaweed in animal feed exists, meaning there is no internationally recognized benchmark that producers can target or that regulators can reference when setting national rules. (FAO, 2022; Cottier-Cook et al., 2023). Absent transparency requirements on composition and contaminant limits create market opacity and impede buyer trust In most markets, producers have no obligation to disclose active compound concentrations, contaminant levels, species identity, or harvest source — so buyers and regulators cannot compare products or verify safety claims (Morais et al., 2020). Canada’s mandatory iodine labeling requirements  is one of the few rules that cover all livestock feed materials. International production guidelines with mandatory composition reporting, modeled on existing food safety frameworks, would establish the transparency the market requires.

Projects from Ocean CDR Community

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