The Centre for Process Innovation (CPI) has announced that the SeaGas collaboration has successfully harvested a 20 tonne batch of seaweed, the largest harvest of farmed seaweed in the UK to date. The SeaGas project, funded jointly by Innovate UK and the Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council (BBSRC), is assessing the viability – both technical and financial – of farming sugar kelp seaweed for bioenergy production through anaerobic digestion (AD).
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Anaerobic Digestion (AD) processes traditionally use crops such as maize and beet as well as agricultural and food wastes. Seaweed could be a suitable feedstock replacement as it is a sustainable source of biomass that does not require fertiliser, freshwater or agricultural land for production.
Furthermore, seaweeds have high productivity, fast growth rates and high polysaccharide content, all of which are important qualities for biofuel biomass yet despite these benefits, only one percent of the world’s seaweed is farmed in Europe, with Asia responsible for 96.6 percent of the global seaweed production.
SeaGas project
The Centre for Process Innovation (CPI), the UK’s technology innovation provider for process manufacturing, announced on July 20 that the SeaGas collaboration has successfully harvested a 20-tonne batch of seaweed, the largest harvest of farmed seaweed in the UK to date.
Jointly funded by Innovate UK and the Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council (BBSRC), the partners of the SeaGas project are assessing the viability – both technical and financial – of farming sugar kelp seaweed for bioenergy production through AD.
The partners are collaborating to build a viable supply chain for farming and storage of seaweed in the UK, initially for the production of biomethane from seaweed through AD, but ultimately to stimulate the market and for higher value products from this sustainable feedstock.
The three-year project brings together expertise in AD process development, seaweed growth and storage, economic modelling, environmental and social impact, and the supply chain – from seabed access for seaweed farming through to biomethane injection into the national grid.
It hopes to be a platform for further exploitation of seaweed in other applications.
The project, which is on track for completion in June 2018, involves the collaboration of six partners including CPI, The Crown Estate, the Centre for Environment, Fisheries and Aquaculture Science (CEFAS), the Scottish Association for Marine Science (SAMS), Queen’s University Belfast and Newcastle University. The project also involves two companies on subcontracts, ADAS and Eunomia.
The technical focus of the project is divided into three key areas: seaweed storage to ensure year-round supply, the potential for biomethane production and AD operational factors, and the environmental and socio-economic effects. The financial impact is also being assessed through a financial model created for SeaGas to include the specifics of seaweed cultivation, harvesting and storage.
A novel storage system is being developed that will support 12-month AD operation and counter seaweed availability and variability.
The project has progressed from operating a series of 5-litre reactors, investigating the operating parameters, to now running two 800-litre AD reactor vessels on a pilot scale.
The project has recently reached a significant milestone, producing and harvesting the largest batch of farmed seaweed from UK shores to date. This gives promise that bioenergy could be produced from seaweed using AD on a commercial scale.
We are proud to be part of a powerful consortium that, for the first time ever, brings together the expertise and facilities needed to develop a methodology and commercial rationale for exploiting the UK’s seabed as a source of sustainable biomass and bioenergy. This project will help strengthen the UK’s position as a world leader in industrial biotechnology, said Santhana Krishnan, Project Manager at CPI.