Skip to content
Agriculture Farming Rural, Environment

Sustainable seaweed farming the way of the future

Monash University 2 mins read

Seaweed farming could be the sustainable solution the world has been looking for, but new research from Monash University and the University of the Sunshine Coast suggests Australia has a long way to go before it can capitalise on growing global demand.

Exploring ways to grow the fledgling industry in Australia, researchers found key improvements to farming equipment and practices could provide the kick start it needs.

Lead researcher Dr Belinda Comerford, from the Marine Evolutionary Ecology Research Group at Monash School of Biological Sciences, said seaweed cultivation could be a gamechanger to meet Australia’s net zero targets and transition to greener industries.

“We have seen global production of algal aquaculture like seaweed increase 4.3 times in the past 20 years,” Dr Comerford said.

“This is an industry with huge potential, and something a country like Australia is well positioned to leverage, with an abundance of coastal land that is suited to seaweed cultivation.

“Our work focuses on giving industry the tools and expertise to produce yields that will make their operations commercially viable on a large scale.”

Seaweed can be cultivated on land, in tanks where it is rotated around using seawater and air pumps, requiring less resources and generating less emissions than other Western farming practices.

It has a variety of uses, including food, pharmaceuticals, building materials and an energy source.

Dr Comerford and her team conducted their study at the Bribie Island Research Centre in Queensland, where the plants were grown free-floating in 1000 litre tanks.

She said a key finding was that the tanks needed to better mimic underwater light conditions, with the study showing the seaweed experienced periods of under- and over-exposure to light as the seaweed rotated around the tank.

“What we were able to do was discover just how different the patterns of light exposure between seaweed growing naturally and seaweed growing in our culture tanks were,” she said.

“This is really important because it allows us to provide advice to industry about optimum conditions.

“We can then provide recommendations to the industry that will help set the standards for best practice, such as stocking density, or lead to the development of new equipment, like different size tanks.

“As with any commercial venture, maximising yields is critical to the viability of the operation, which in turn will help develop and sustain an Australian industry.”

Read the full paper in the Journal of Applied Phycology online at doi.org/10.1007/s10811-025-03462-8

Images and vision available here

MEDIA ENQUIRIES

Toni Brient
Media and Communications Manager, Monash University
M: +61 456 428 906
E: [email protected] 

GENERAL MEDIA ENQUIRIES
Monash Media
T: +61 (0) 3 9903 4840
E: [email protected] 

For more Monash media stories, visit our news and events site

Media

More from this category

  • Agriculture Farming Rural
  • 17/12/2025
  • 14:03
Australian Firefighters Climate Alliance

Firefighters counter misinformation on battery storage risks

Anti‑renewables campaigners are increasingly weaponising community concerns about battery storage systems, spreading misinformation that threatens to derail Australia’s urgent energy transition. Australia, like other carbon‑intensive nations, must take decisive action to prevent climate change impacts from becoming irreversible. An important part of this action must include a rapid shift away from fossil fuels to renewables, storage, and energy efficiency. Sadly, the energy transition is increasingly bogged down in a culture war quagmire that isdriven by conservative media, politicians and vested interests. Misinformation is rife, and shared widely on social media. A common line of attack against renewable energy systems –…

  • Agriculture Farming Rural
  • 17/12/2025
  • 12:33
Rabobank

WA farmers weigh bumper harvest against economic pressures as they look to year ahead

Key Facts: Results at a glance: ■ WA winter crops on track for record yields, but economic pressures keeping a lid on confidence. ■ Farmers are cautious of rising input costs combined with softening commodity prices. ■ Investment intention in WA remains strong, with farmers investing in on-farm efficiency gains. Western Australian farmers are finishing 2025 with a somewhat cautious outlook on the year ahead, as the state celebrates another bumper harvest, but tempered by easing commodity prices and rising input costs, the latest Rabobank Rural Confidence Survey has found. The quarter four survey, released today, found net rural sentiment…

  • Energy, Environment
  • 17/12/2025
  • 11:47
Climate Media Centre

Talent Alert: Experts and case study available for interview on CSIRO GenCost Draft 2025-26 Report

Wednesday 17 December For immediate release. CSIRO’s Draft 2025-26 GenCost Report, released today, has once again found that renewables (solar and onshore wind) are set to form the lowest cost electricity generation mix for Australia through to 2050. The new CSIRO and AEMO modelling confirms electricity generation costs would be a third lower with an 82% renewable grid, while building a new coal-fired power station today would deliver electricity for at least double the cost of solar and wind. Today’s report underscores that the pace of the shift to clean energy must increase, to secure a stable electricity grid and…

Media Outreach made fast, easy, simple.

Feature your press release on Medianet's News Hub every time you distribute with Medianet. Pay per release or save with a subscription.