The European Commission, the European Climate, Infrastructure and Environment Executive Agency (CINEA) and a consortium of sustainability consultants and algae organisations are launching a European algae stakeholder platform, called EU4Algae. The aim of the platform is to accelerate the development of a European algae industry and promote algae for nutrition and other uses among consumers and businesses in the EU.
Algae are produced and consumed throughout the world for
centuries. They are appreciated in especially Asian cuisine for their high
nutritional value and distinct salty or umami taste. In recent years, they are
becoming a standard ingredient as well in western vegan dishes.
Outside of the culinary realm, algae have turned into a go-to feedstock for
sustainable industrial applications, such as biodegradable plastics. Moreover,
their production helps improving ocean health by reducing carbon dioxide,
phosphorus and nitrogen in marine ecosystems. They are also a nursery and
hide-out for many marine animals, promoting underwater biodiversity.
Despite all the above, the uptake in Europe of algae
production and consumption is slow. Too slow. So the European Commission is
stepping up the game.
Together with CINEA and a consortium (comprised of EurA AG, EABA, Systemiq,
Technopolis and s.Pro), the Commission is launching EU4Algae. This 3-year
project will accelerate the scale-up of a regenerative, resilient, fair and
climate friendly algae industry in Europe, and bring more novel algae species
to the EU market.
The platform will be a unique space for collaboration among European algae stakeholders including algae farmers, producers, sellers, consumers, technology developers as well as business-support organisations, investors, public authorities, academia, researchers and NGOs. It will also act as a single information hub on algae funding calls, projects, business-related information, intelligence and best practices.
The collaboration platform will be online by the summer 2022.
Learn more here