Seaweed a model solution for fighting climate change

Seaweed a model solution for fighting climate change

Researchers from KAUST and Aarhus university believe they have identified a model solution to climate change, biodiversity loss, joblessness, hunger and environmental damage. In a paper published in Nature Sustainability, the co-authors outline how the cultivation and use of seaweed as a carbon capture technology, a job and tax revenue generator, and a food source, can protect and restore the planet. Credit photos from Aarhus to Michael Bo Rasmussen, Aarhus University.

THUWAL, Saudi Arabia, Oct. 07, 2021 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — Seaweed, as its unfortunate name suggests, can be a nuisance. It makes a mess of beautiful beaches. It bobs up and down in the waves in an unsightly blob. And it sticks to unsuspecting swimmers as they try to enjoy a dip. But despite its reputation with some ocean goers, seaweed just might be one of the most powerful tools we have to save the planet from manmade climate change while providing a path to realizing many of the UN Sustainable Development Goals.

Researchers from KAUST and Aarhus University believe seaweed is a model solution to climate change, biodiversity loss, joblessness, hunger and environmental damage. In a paper published in Nature Sustainability the co-authors outline how the cultivation and use of seaweed as a carbon capture technology, a job and tax revenue generator, and a food source, can help protect and restore our planet.

“Our research consolidates seaweed farming as an underpinning of a sustainable future,” Professor Carlos Duarte, study lead author said. “It is scalable, with a 2,000-fold increase potential, it generates valuable products while also contributing to carbon sequestration below the farm, it produces sustainable fuels, and it displaces carbon-intensive products, thereby providing a range of contributions to climate action. While growing at sea, seaweed forms an ecosystem that delivers multiple benefits to the marine environment.”

The cultivation and use of seaweed, the authors believe, will directly support six of the UN Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs), and indirectly support several others. Achieving zero hunger, supporting good health, making clean energy affordable, as well as supporting industrial innovation, climate action, and ocean conservation, are all outcomes of cultivating seaweed. Not only is the plant climate positive, profitable, and edible, but it promises to feed and employ millions while preserving the planet and fostering poverty reduction and gender equality.

“Seaweed provides wonderful materials for a range of applications, grounded in their amazing diversity, as seaweed are as far apart from a genomic perspective as mushrooms and elephants. This genomic diversity provides a phenomenal source of new materials across a range of industries, from food, to fuels and plastics,” Duarte said.

The pitch, as much as there is one, is that seaweed cultivation must be ramped up significantly. This, of course, might encounter roadblocks in legislatures around the world as western regulations, where seaweed farming is just starting, are quite unwelcoming to seaweed aquaculture. The paper outlines in broad terms the objections that could be raised and addresses them in turn.

“Because seaweed farming is a new industry in western nations, existing regulatory frameworks do not facilitate its development. In some nations it is easier to get a concession for marine oil and gas extraction than for a seaweed farm. Creating a friendlier regulatory environment that encourages, rather than deter, seaweed farming will be critical to delivering on its potential.”

“Currently, seaweed farming occupies about 2,000 Km2 of land, compared to about 60 million Km2 land food producing systems occupy. We consider that about 4 million Km2 of ocean can support seaweed aquaculture while delivering positive impacts on the marine environment. In the rump-up to COP26, we consider that scaling seaweed farming can be a wedge of a regenerative approach to our oceans, delivering climate action while alleviating hunger and poverty,” Duarte said.

Professor Dorte Krause-Jensen from Aarhus University adds that sustainability standards and consideration of the carrying capacity for seaweed farming need be in place to avoid potential unattended negative consequences the farming.

“The utilisation of seaweed in a cascading biorefinery extracting biomolecules sequentially, offers a path to maximise the value of the biomass and render seaweed farming profitable, even in Western countries where costs are higher” said senior researcher Annette Bruhn of Aarhus University. “Promoting sustainable seaweed cultivation as an emission capture and utilisation technology supporting the circular bioeconomy, calls for a cross-sectorial approach to solving societal challenges. We need a disruption of the traditional way of thinking climate, environment and resource provision in each their sector and we need partnerships between science, industry and authorities”.

About KAUST

King Abdullah University of Science and Technology (KAUST) advances science and technology through distinctive and collaborative research integrated with graduate education. Located on the Red Sea coast in Saudi Arabia, KAUST conducts curiosity-driven and goal-oriented research to address global challenges related to food, water, energy, and the environment.

Established in 2009, KAUST is a catalyst for innovation, economic development and social prosperity in Saudi Arabia and the world. The University currently educates and trains master’s and doctoral students, supported by an academic community of faculty members, postdoctoral fellows and research scientists. With over 100 nationalities working and living at KAUST, the University brings together people and ideas from all over the world.

To learn more visit kaust.edu.sa.

About Aarhus

Aarhus University has been achieving excellence in research and education since 1928. Being a top 100 university with more than 50 Masters and Bachelors educations in English, Aarhus University is a leading globally oriented university with a strong engagement in the solving the societal challenges on local and global scale.

Department of Bioscience provide teaching, research and consultancy in all aspects of life; from bacteria to whales, from genes to ecosystems and from fundamental research to applied biology in nature management and biotechnology.

To learn more visit https://international.au.dk/

A photo accompanying this announcement is available at https://www.globenewswire.com/NewsRoom/AttachmentNg/5141687d-2aea-43e1-bddc-623aab93621f

For more information, please contact global.pr@kaust.edu.sa

Crackdown against unvaccinated people across KP continuing

In Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, crackdown against unvaccinated people across the province is continuing.

In Peshawar, Corona vaccination certificates have been termed mandatory in the offices of National Database Regulatory Authority, BRT and other bus terminals.

The teams of Health Departments in various parts of the provincial capital vaccinated the large number of people on the spot.

Similarly, various shops and shopping malls were sealed in Abbottabad due to non-vaccination of staff.

The action against violators of Corona SOPs are also underway in Dera Ismail Khan, Tank, Bannu, Swat, Mardan, Nowshera and other parts of the province.

Source: Radio Pakistan

Wasim Akram Reveals Why He Doesn’t Want to Coach Pakistan Team

Legend Pakistani pacer, Wasim Akram, has revealed that he has no intention of taking up any coaching role with the national team anytime in the near future.

During a recent interview with Cricket Pakistan, the former captain said that one of the biggest reasons for not taking up any role with the national team is that he can’t tolerate the abuse coaches get online.

Akram went on to say that although the passion of Pakistani cricket fans is understandable and their anger is justifiable, the foul language which they use when the team doesn’t perform well is unfathomable.

He added that the Pakistani fans must understand that although a coach can devise any plan before the match, it is up to the players to implement that plan on the pitch.

Wasim Akram represented Pakistan in 104 Tests and 356 ODIs, claiming 414 and 502 wickets respectively. After retiring from the national side, he moved behind the mic and became a commentator.

Although he has mentored Kolkata Knight Riders (KKR) as a bowling coach in the IPL and worked with Islamabad United, Multan Sultan, and Karachi Kings in the PSL, the former left-arm pacer has never accepted any coaching role with the national cricket team.

Source: Pro Pakistani

US Partnership Helps Boosts Student Literacy in Balochistan and KP

The United States government, together with the government of Pakistan and provincial partners, has helped increase the reading skills of students in Grades 1 and 2 through the Pakistan Reading Project. Over the course of seven years, the United States Agency for International Development (USAID) project trained 27,000 teachers on reading instruction and reached 1.5 million children in areas with low levels of reading literacy, with girls representing 47 percent of the participants in the project.

Following the completion of the project, partners shared a reading skills assessment with provincial and national education officials, emphasizing students’ gains from Balochistan and Khyber Pakhtunkhwa. Being able to read fluently at grade level is tied directly to a student’s ability to learn across all curriculum subjects and is indicative of future academic success. Girls represented 45 percent of the participants in Balochistan and 55 percent in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa.

“The Pakistan Reading Project has highlighted the importance of learning to read in local languages at an early age,” said USAID’s Acting Mission Director, Michael Nehrbass. “The project’s interventions in schools demonstrate that the right support can help teachers teach better so children can become better readers, positively impacting families and communities.”

The Pakistan Reading Project was a $144 million project implemented in close collaboration with federal, provincial, and regional education departments in Balochistan, Sindh, Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa, Islamabad Capital Territory, Gilgit-Baltistan, and Azad Kashmir. The program demonstrated that classroom-based training and mentoring for teachers, dedicated class time for reading, and supplemental reading materials that engage and challenge students are the most effective ways to increase reading fluency.

The project used these proven techniques to help students in Pakistan increase their fluency and achieve results. While 44 percent of students who entered Grade 3 in Balochistan in 2017 could not read in Urdu, that dropped to just five percent in 2020, and the number of students entering Grade 3 with some fluency nearly doubled to 72 percent. Similarly, the number of students able to read more fluently when entering Grade 3 increased in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, with girls slightly outperforming boys at the end of the project. The number of students who met or exceeded the reading standards increased from 16 and 17 percent in 2017 in Balochistan and Khyber Pakhtunkhwa respectively, to 24 percent in both provinces in 2020, a significant increase in the number of high-performing students.

The Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation selected the Pakistan Reading Project as one of the top 50 reading projects around the world in its Learning at Scale study.

Source: Pro Pakistani

Govt Announces Date to Resume Normal Classes in Schools, Colleges & Universities

Federal Minister for Planning, Development, Reforms & Special Initiatives, Asad Umar, has announced on Thursday that all the educational institutions would start normal classes from Monday, 11 October.

“Based on the reduced level of disease spread and the launch of the school vaccination program, it has been decided in today’s NCOC meeting to allow all educational institutions to start normal classes from Monday the 11th of October,” Minister Umar, who also heads the National Command and Operation Centre (NCOC), tweeted.

Earlier Asad Umar announced the relaxation of COVID-19 related restrictions imposed in eight cities including Quetta, Peshawar, Islamabad, Rawalpindi, Muzaffarabad, Mirpur, Gilgit, and Skardu from 1 October.

Besides, Umar said that restrictions shall be placed on adults not fully vaccinated from 1 October as NCOC had set a target of inoculating at least 40% of the eligible population.

Source: Pro Pakistani

PM to address Seerat Conference on Sunday

Prime Minister Imran Khan will address Seerat Conference in Islamabad on Sunday.

This was announced by Minister for Information and Broadcasting Chaudhry Fawad Hussain while talking to media after PTI’s core committee meeting held in Islamabad on Thursday.

He said Prime Minister’s address will be telecasted at district level by PTI.

Chaudhry Fawad Hussain said with Prime Minister’s address Ashra-e-Rehmatul-lil-Aalimeen will commence.

The Minister for Information said the core committee also discussed membership drive.

Source: Radio Pakistan

Pakistan Expects 9.374 Million Cotton Bales in Crop Season 2021-22

The Cotton Crop Assessment Committee (CCAC) has assessed that the country is expected to have a production of 9.374 million bales in the crop season 2021-22, of which Punjab is likely to have an output of 5.44 with Sindh standing at 3.50, Balochistan 0.43 and Khyber Pakhtunkhwa 0.004 million bales. The assessment is based on the weight of one cotton bale at 170 kilograms.

The CCAC held its second meeting with Secretary Ministry of National Food Security & Research Mr. Tahir Khurshid in the chair to assess the volume of the current cotton crop in the country on Thursday.

Representatives of the provincial governments, Plant Protection Department (PPD), Trading Cooperation of Pakistan (TCP), Federal Seed Certification & Registration Department (FSC&RD), Pakistan Central Cotton Committee (PCCC), and All Pakistan Textile Mills Association (APTMA) attended the meeting.

Mr. Tahir Khurshid welcomed the participants and appreciated the stakeholders’ interest in the process of cotton crop assessment.

On the occasion, Cotton Commissioner Dr. Khalid Abdullah presented an overview of the cotton production scenario in the country. He stated that the weather and prices were favorable for cotton production, adding that the government’s announcement of intervention price enhanced the confidence of growers in crop management which resulted in high arrivals of cotton in ginneries.

The committee chair adjourned the meeting with a vote of thanks

Source: Pro Pakistani