Bill Collins discusses the longevity superfood: why & how to farm it, champion it, and consume it!

Episode
Join Host, Angela Faye on Canada’s Podcast speaking to Bill Collins about seaweed as a longevity superfood, plus how...
Key takeaways
- Seaweed farming addresses both climate action and food security by sequestering carbon from the atmosphere while producing a sustainable, high-nutrition crop that can feed growing global populations.
- Successful seaweed cultivation requires partnerships with coastal communities, particularly First Nations in BC, who provide both territorial access and generations of ocean knowledge essential for farming operations.
- Adding just half a percent of seaweed to cattle feed can reduce methane emissions by up to 90-95% while improving feed conversion ratios by 30%, creating a triple environmental benefit.
- The seaweed industry must be built at scale through networks of coordinated community farms working together, not isolated small operations, to meet market demand and drive meaningful climate impact.
- North America has the opportunity to disrupt the current seaweed supply chain by replacing the 8,000 tons imported from Asia in 2019 with locally-grown production that creates jobs and strengthens coastal economies.
Transcript
Full transcript page · Interactive episode
============================================================ TRANSCRIPTION WITH SPEAKERS ============================================================ [00:01] SPEAKER_01: Come to Lethbridge and join an innovative community for entrepreneurs. [00:06] SPEAKER_01: With more than a quarter of the 100,000 population under the age of 34, Lethbridge brims with [00:12] SPEAKER_01: energy. [00:13] SPEAKER_01: We'll help you to kickstart, innovate, and grow. [00:17] SPEAKER_01: We'll lethbridge. [00:18] SPEAKER_01: Southern Alberta's help for innovation and technology. [00:21] SPEAKER_01: It's the bright choice for business builders. [00:24] SPEAKER_01: Go to chooselethbridge.ca slash entrepreneur and we'll help you move and grow in Lethbridge. [00:32] SPEAKER_00: Welcome to Canada's podcast. [00:35] SPEAKER_00: The number one podcast for entrepreneurs by entrepreneurs. [00:44] SPEAKER_03: How to use a seaweed farm to supersize your wealth, your community building, and personal [00:50] SPEAKER_03: longevity. [00:51] SPEAKER_03: It can happen. [00:53] SPEAKER_03: So first of all, that's the scene for today's podcast. [00:57] SPEAKER_03: I am super excited to have Bill Collins here from Cascadia seaweed and he has got some [01:04] SPEAKER_03: knowledge that everybody should listen to if you're in a coastal community around the [01:08] SPEAKER_03: globe. [01:09] SPEAKER_03: So first of all, knowing that fully self-sufficient, hyper-local villages are the evolution of [01:16] SPEAKER_03: community living. [01:16] SPEAKER_03: Not only is it possible, it's likely that fully private or hybrid private public seaweed [01:22] SPEAKER_03: farms will become a mainstay of food security in coastal communities around the globe, [01:28] SPEAKER_03: my prediction within 10 years. [01:31] SPEAKER_03: So first of all, it's already happening, so if you think it's in the too hard basket, [01:35] SPEAKER_03: think again. [01:37] SPEAKER_03: I'm Angela Faye, host on Canada's podcast and founder impact coach at future bill, building [01:43] SPEAKER_03: lasting community impact. [01:46] SPEAKER_03: Speaking with me today is Bill Collins, a Canada's podcast alumni and co-founder of Cascadia [01:52] SPEAKER_03: seaweed, who is absolutely poised to help accelerate Canada to be in the global top three [01:59] SPEAKER_03: best sustainable fish and seafood producers by 2040. [02:05] SPEAKER_03: Before we get into some of the solutions, sorry Bill, you want to comment? [02:09] SPEAKER_04: That's the game plan. [02:11] SPEAKER_03: That's the game plan, I love it. [02:13] SPEAKER_03: So before we get into the solutions, I'd just like to bring some awareness to the problems [02:17] SPEAKER_03: that you're solving, Bill with Cascadia. [02:20] SPEAKER_03: So starting with, give me a little bit of perspective on some of the problems that [02:25] SPEAKER_03: you shot for right before Cascadia launched into business. [02:30] SPEAKER_04: Yeah, when we first opened up our doors, we knew that the challenge was going to be [02:35] SPEAKER_04: access to water. [02:37] SPEAKER_04: Its seaweed is grown in the coastal zone in tempered waters in Canada and finding the right [02:46] SPEAKER_04: locations that are conducive to seaweed grows. [02:49] SPEAKER_04: Now seaweed is a weed and it's just as its name states, it grows everywhere. [02:54] SPEAKER_04: There is diversity in seaweed off the British Columbia coast, for example, there are 630 [02:59] SPEAKER_04: species that grow natively. [03:01] SPEAKER_04: So we want to exploit that and to ensure that nature continues to thrive in its biodiversity. [03:08] SPEAKER_04: Cascadia needs access to water. [03:11] SPEAKER_04: And we do that through partnering with the coastal communities, first nations in particular. [03:17] SPEAKER_04: And so for us, the key was gaining access to that water in partnerships so that we can [03:23] SPEAKER_04: grow this really beautifully sustainable crop. [03:26] SPEAKER_03: Well, in some of the problems that everybody is facing, I mean, not some of the solutions [03:31] SPEAKER_03: of getting Cascadia happening on the ground, but there are pressures on the ocean right [03:36] SPEAKER_03: now or intense in growing as far as having access to the ocean but also preserving and [03:44] SPEAKER_03: protecting that ocean. [03:45] SPEAKER_03: And Canadians, in fact, all leaders are increasingly concerned about food security and stable job [03:51] SPEAKER_03: creation. [03:53] SPEAKER_03: And traditional agriculture is responsible for 6%, and I'm going to ask you to clarify [03:59] SPEAKER_03: and make sure that's right, 6% of global GHGs, 40% of methane gas emissions. [04:05] SPEAKER_03: And there's mounting fear globally about the preservation of coastal communities with [04:09] SPEAKER_03: climate evolution, you like. [04:14] SPEAKER_04: Yeah, you're so right, Angela. [04:15] SPEAKER_04: The way we view the world is a culmination of two things at the moment. [04:21] SPEAKER_04: First of all, climate action. [04:22] SPEAKER_04: It's no longer good enough to say we're sustainable. [04:27] SPEAKER_04: Industry has to take a very proactive approach to repair the damage that's been done to the planet. [04:33] SPEAKER_04: And we, this will not be an overnight thing. [04:36] SPEAKER_04: It has to be done with expediency. [04:39] SPEAKER_04: We can't wait to change the planet, but we do recognize there's certain barriers to growth. [04:43] SPEAKER_04: So it's the combination or the nexus of food security, health and wellness of the individual [04:50] SPEAKER_04: and access to a good secure route for food. [04:55] SPEAKER_04: In addition to this climate action, that's where Cascadia sits right in the middle. [04:59] SPEAKER_04: Because we can deliver a climate positive crop, secure food to feed the 10 billion people [05:08] SPEAKER_04: that will be inhabiting this planet in the not too distant future. [05:12] SPEAKER_04: And at the same time, seaweed farming is done at a community level. [05:16] SPEAKER_02: Right. [05:17] SPEAKER_04: Because what we want to be able to do is put people back in their homes, in their traditional [05:22] SPEAKER_04: homes, spread out a little bit more and doing meaningful work on the water that is in conjunction [05:29] SPEAKER_04: and harmony with the ocean and its inhabitants. [05:33] SPEAKER_04: And at the same time, can transform food security from a traditional terrestrial agriculture [05:38] SPEAKER_04: venue to something that's broader. [05:41] SPEAKER_04: That's what the Cascadia's goal is. [05:44] SPEAKER_03: Well, and all of the problems that we talked about really have one core theme, I guess, [05:50] SPEAKER_03: as to that problem, which is decentralization. [05:54] SPEAKER_03: And the need for a shift to local food and energy production. [05:58] SPEAKER_03: What do you think? [05:59] SPEAKER_04: Yeah, I love it. [06:00] SPEAKER_04: We may comment later, but the way I see it is our goal is to decarbonize the atmosphere [06:06] SPEAKER_04: and recarbonize the biosphere in order to set the track back. [06:11] SPEAKER_04: And in order to do that, it has to be done at a community level, well coordinated community [06:17] SPEAKER_04: level. [06:18] SPEAKER_04: We cannot do this in isolation and individual community. [06:21] SPEAKER_04: There has to be a network of communities. [06:23] SPEAKER_04: There has to be a network of firms. [06:25] SPEAKER_04: They have to interact with a network, a transportation network to deliver. [06:30] SPEAKER_04: We need food processing, value added. [06:32] SPEAKER_04: We may go into that a little bit later in terms of the other things. [06:35] SPEAKER_04: But it's a community and network of communities that will actually deliver seaweed firms to [06:41] SPEAKER_04: the scale necessary to meet the demand. [06:44] SPEAKER_03: Let's talk a little bit about you, the man, Bill Collins. [06:48] SPEAKER_03: Bill, what again? [06:49] SPEAKER_03: What's your entrepreneurial journey and really what today has become the evolution of your [06:56] SPEAKER_03: massively transformative purpose? [06:58] SPEAKER_04: Yeah, I started off as a marine geologist, spending a lot of time in international science [07:03] SPEAKER_04: and lots of survey work in many of the coastal oceans of the world. [07:08] SPEAKER_04: I thought we have an opportunity. [07:11] SPEAKER_04: I did manage to spend a beautiful couple of years in the South Pacific in the 90s and [07:15] SPEAKER_04: soft firsthand if the globe was on a trajectory for sea level rise or certainly sea level change. [07:23] SPEAKER_04: It was going to massively impact initially those communities where the height of land [07:28] SPEAKER_04: is a meter and a half. [07:30] SPEAKER_02: Right. [07:30] SPEAKER_02: Right. [07:30] SPEAKER_02: Countries. [07:31] SPEAKER_04: So that put a set of glasses on in front of me with a view that whatever has to happen, [07:39] SPEAKER_04: whether it's industry or science, it needs to be done through the lens of climate action, [07:45] SPEAKER_04: had the privilege of working an eventually owning a company that was in electronics manufacturing [07:53] SPEAKER_04: for mass transit because mass transit will be a solution for folks getting around with [07:57] SPEAKER_04: as minimal impact as possible on our environment. [08:01] SPEAKER_04: All of that came together in the venture that really was the seed for the idea about [08:08] SPEAKER_04: Cascadia where we were looking for ideas that would create business on Vancouver Island, [08:16] SPEAKER_04: attract foreign direct investment and where Vancouver Island and the coast of BC, and in [08:21] SPEAKER_04: fact, the coast of Canada could play a have a global competitive advantage when you take [08:27] SPEAKER_04: into account food security and climate action. [08:30] SPEAKER_04: It becomes seaweed as one really good solution to address those two things and where BC has [08:39] SPEAKER_04: a distinct global advantage. [08:43] SPEAKER_03: Well and what I'm curious a little bit about is we have our distinct competitive advantage [08:49] SPEAKER_03: because of the types of waters that we have and what was the number of seaweed plants? [08:54] SPEAKER_04: 630. [08:56] SPEAKER_03: If I'm talking to island nations across the globe, would they have seaweed in some form? [09:04] SPEAKER_04: Yeah, seaweed generally is a macro algae and all coastal waters have macro algae, although [09:11] SPEAKER_04: we're losing them at an astonishing rate for the climate reasons. [09:16] SPEAKER_04: So there is opportunity, we're part of a consortium of global seaweed farmers that range from [09:22] SPEAKER_04: a 300 year old farm in Japan to the plants for a newly minted farm off the coast of Namibia. [09:30] SPEAKER_02: Oh wow, oh wow, so really that wow, that's quite the collaboration group. [09:35] SPEAKER_04: It is, it is, it was brought together under the auspices of oceans 2050, whose goal is [09:40] SPEAKER_04: to bring back the 50% loss of biodiversity in the oceans by the year 2050. [09:45] SPEAKER_04: It's led by a woman Alexandra Kusto, whose Jacoosto's granddaughter. [09:49] SPEAKER_03: Yes, yes. [09:50] SPEAKER_04: And we're part of the consortium called carbon farming 2050, where we're going to quantify [09:57] SPEAKER_04: the value of seaweed cultivation in support of permanent carbon sequestration. [10:04] SPEAKER_03: For the laymen, what does that mean? [10:07] SPEAKER_03: What the cost, what sort of scale are we talking about the cost and what does that sequestration [10:12] SPEAKER_03: mean? [10:13] SPEAKER_03: I got the word right. [10:14] SPEAKER_04: Yeah, sequestration, yeah. [10:16] SPEAKER_04: It means that the more we can capture CO2 from the atmosphere, and so seaweed macroeology, [10:28] SPEAKER_04: for example, is not a plant, it sits sort of plant like out there, it's non-animal, [10:33] SPEAKER_04: right, nutrition, for example. [10:35] SPEAKER_04: It absorbs CO2 through the ocean and the ocean water as it waves in the currents and it extracts [10:45] SPEAKER_04: really essential nutrients from the seawater. [10:48] SPEAKER_04: Part of that is CO2 through the algae life cycle. [10:53] SPEAKER_04: It absorbs that CO2, turns it into plant or algae energy if you want to think about it like that. [11:00] SPEAKER_04: And some of that algae, as it's growing, sluffs off into the deep ocean. [11:08] SPEAKER_04: And that's permanent sequestration provided. [11:10] SPEAKER_04: We can quantify that. [11:11] SPEAKER_04: And we know there's science out there that talks about transportation mechanisms from [11:17] SPEAKER_04: sediments in the coastal zone into deep sediments in the deep oceans. [11:24] SPEAKER_04: So that represents permanency sequestration. [11:27] SPEAKER_04: Now, your listeners will say, okay, well, if you're harvesting it, how permanent is that? [11:31] SPEAKER_04: Well, the actual macroeology that we harvest and eat or repurpose for other things, [11:38] SPEAKER_04: that gets recycled. So that's not permanency sequestration. [11:42] SPEAKER_04: However, there is a component as it grows will fall into the deep ocean. [11:47] SPEAKER_04: Also, our plan in terms of supporting not just carbon neutrality, but a carbon negative in [11:55] SPEAKER_04: that we're sinking carbon is to leave seaweed under production lines to offset any of the, [12:02] SPEAKER_04: say, the energy we use as part of internal combustion engine or the trucks that take [12:08] SPEAKER_04: our seaweed products to market, for example. [12:11] SPEAKER_03: What I'd like to just delve into a little bit because we talked about the making of a seaweed farm, [12:18] SPEAKER_03: but let's just talk a little bit about seaweed cultivation, the business. [12:22] SPEAKER_03: What is the blueprint needed? [12:24] SPEAKER_03: You know, starting with commercial access to waters, through to end product. [12:29] SPEAKER_03: What, tell us a little bit about that blueprint. [12:31] SPEAKER_04: Right. So there's some fundamental commonalities in whatever market vertical we end up being into. [12:38] SPEAKER_04: Those commonalities are you need ocean access to ocean, pristine ocean waters that have a [12:45] SPEAKER_04: minimal integration or interaction with, say, vessel traffic lanes. [12:50] SPEAKER_04: So you need partners to deliver access permissions and regulatory to satisfy the regulators that [12:58] SPEAKER_04: we're doing this in a way that's not going to tremendously negatively impact. We think clearly [13:04] SPEAKER_04: the benefits outweigh the impacts, but anytime you're putting equipment in the water, [13:09] SPEAKER_04: you do impact that ocean. So we're not blind to that. It's really important to understand that. [13:15] SPEAKER_04: So access to water in British Columbia, in the British Columbia context, that's partnering with [13:20] SPEAKER_04: First Nations. There's many, many, many more reasons for us to partner with First Nations, [13:26] SPEAKER_04: then just gaining access to their territory. We strongly believe that a workforce, [13:32] SPEAKER_04: a knowledgeable workforce that have been on the water and eating seaweed for millennia [13:37] SPEAKER_04: are the perfect partners, business partners for Cascadia seaweed as we try and take this product to [13:43] SPEAKER_04: world. Okay. So once you harvest it, you now see we just for your listeners, it grows on production [13:53] SPEAKER_04: lines in the water. So horizontal lines, regular rope, that's hung between a float and an anchor. [14:04] SPEAKER_04: We have to cultivate it so there's science involved. We have to take a seaweed, [14:11] SPEAKER_04: reproductive tissue, bring it into a lab, into a big aquarium, and grow seaweed babies, [14:16] SPEAKER_04: and then outplant them. That happens on a yearly cycle. So you have seaweed growing on the lines, [14:23] SPEAKER_04: you go out and you're mechanically, you physically take it off the line and harvest it, [14:29] SPEAKER_04: bring it to coastal zone near you, a shore jetty near you because it doesn't last that long once [14:36] SPEAKER_04: you harvest it. Right. Ours. Okay. It starts to degrade and obviously we want the highest quality. [14:40] SPEAKER_04: So then it has to be stabilized and we're using existing infrastructure. Yeah. We believe for [14:46] SPEAKER_04: example in BC, the social licenses there for industrial use. And I have to, I can't stress [14:54] SPEAKER_04: enough, it has to be industrial use in harmony with the environment in a positive approach. [14:59] SPEAKER_04: That's clear from the lessons of the past, we can't avoid talking about that subject and we try [15:04] SPEAKER_04: to be as transparent as we can about the impacts. So you have a processing seafood processing [15:10] SPEAKER_04: facility that can take seaweed into their stream. It gets prepared, sorted. It will be, if it's [15:20] SPEAKER_04: fresh frozen stream, then it will be frozen. If it is to be dried and powdered so that it enters [15:27] SPEAKER_04: another food stream, either way, it is fine. It would go then to a value added, like a co-packed [15:33] SPEAKER_04: facility where it would be transformed into something that's really tasty. I have to say, [15:40] SPEAKER_04: if you have the opportunity to go out in a boat and pick some seaweed right out of the water and [15:45] SPEAKER_04: eat it, you would be amazed. You might think, oh, this is a salty, slimy mess. Absolutely, [15:51] SPEAKER_04: the opposite. It doesn't taste salty, it tastes green and lovely and crunchy, highly recommended. [15:57] SPEAKER_04: So when you get the seaweed, then of course you have the product formulation. We expect to have, [16:02] SPEAKER_04: oh, I don't know, 30 or 40 skews at the end of the day, as we attempt to realize our goal of [16:09] SPEAKER_04: making seaweed a staple in North America, not just a delicacy or something that you might pick up [16:16] SPEAKER_04: in the sushi counter at your local supermarket. So those are the mechanisms to get it. And once it's [16:22] SPEAKER_04: prepared and stabilized, its distribution network will be like any other food distribution network. [16:29] SPEAKER_04: The Roots of Market are all going to be the same. And how much do you imagine would be consumed [16:35] SPEAKER_03: in the local community or the regional community versus exported? Well, if we make it a staple, [16:41] SPEAKER_04: as in many countries it is now, South America, I'll point to Chile, seaweed is a staple. By the way, [16:47] SPEAKER_04: lower uptake rates of COVID from countries that have seaweed in their diet for all its medicinal [16:55] SPEAKER_04: and health and wellness purposes. If we are successful at delivering it as a staple in Canada or [17:02] SPEAKER_04: North America, then it will be eaten by every community. The beauty is if you're talking about [17:08] SPEAKER_04: hyper local food and we have seaweed farms, we have a network of seaweed farms up and down the coast, [17:15] SPEAKER_04: then you should be able to gain access to it from your local producers. In the same way that you might [17:19] SPEAKER_04: go to a local orchard to get apples that, you know, the 50 mile diet or the 100 mile diet, [17:25] SPEAKER_04: it should be doable if we live next to the coast. To connect, a center for entrepreneurship and [17:32] SPEAKER_01: innovation and lethbridge has been spring-blinged entrepreneurs to success for 10 years and counting. [17:39] SPEAKER_01: Our spirit of innovation is a way of life. We have an incredible environment. Our innovators are [17:45] SPEAKER_01: not afraid to stand apart because they know that in Lethbridge we are brighter together. [17:51] SPEAKER_01: We are Lethbridge. Come and join us. Go to chooselethbridge.ca slash entrepreneur and we'll help you [17:59] SPEAKER_03: move and grow in Lethbridge. Tell me a little bit, Bill, about why? I mean, you've done so much [18:07] SPEAKER_03: groundwork, literally groundwork or seawork. You're like on, you know, prepping. You've got [18:14] SPEAKER_03: R&D site. You have a test farm on the go, which was why I wanted to tap in your story, but what's [18:20] SPEAKER_03: happening now? Right. So you were already at the growing, you're about to hit, pervist. Can you [18:26] SPEAKER_03: tell me a little bit about what specifically is happening at the city? Yeah, I sure can. We realized [18:31] SPEAKER_04: we had to be large out of the gate. So within in 2019, and I think we probably spoke in October of 2019, [18:40] SPEAKER_04: we had we were just in the process of putting farms in the water. That was our first harvest. We [18:46] SPEAKER_04: harvested 20 tons in the territories of the Euchachlis-it tribe government and the Hohweye. We harvested them [18:52] SPEAKER_04: last year in 2020. We used that as an input to the development process. We have three food [18:58] SPEAKER_04: developers right now preparing this delicious food for for market. We felt we had to be large [19:06] SPEAKER_04: scale. So in so this year, well, sorry, 2020 last year, calendar year, we put 30 line kilometers [19:17] SPEAKER_04: in the water. So we grew by fivefold. Wow. Those farms were put in that with an additional territory [19:25] SPEAKER_04: of the Clahous First Nation in partnership and in and around muscle farms, by the way, because [19:30] SPEAKER_04: integrated multi-trophic aquaculture is one way to support a more holistic view of the of ecosystem [19:36] SPEAKER_04: and of the its impact on from aquaculture. So we have those firms and all firms reporting back [19:44] SPEAKER_04: right now that the seaweed that was planted in late December and in early January is growing [19:50] SPEAKER_04: very well. So our goal this year is our first commercial harvest. Some were about 150 tons, [19:57] SPEAKER_04: which we will bring to to primary processing locally in British Columbia, local processors, [20:06] SPEAKER_04: and then get it into co-packs probably on the lower mainland for direct to consumer availability [20:12] SPEAKER_04: through a brand which we will launch in May. Stay tuned listeners. This is going to be it's going to be [20:18] SPEAKER_03: great. I totally see another podcast coming. It went through there, right? Yeah. And that's amazing. [20:24] SPEAKER_03: And I mean, we talked about some of the infrastructure. You said you're leveraging also things like [20:28] SPEAKER_03: the food hub in a neighboring community. You know, leveraging existing infrastructure that [20:34] SPEAKER_03: there as well as building and investing in some of your problems. This is a this is a transformative [20:39] SPEAKER_04: industry and a and will provide a transition from from jobs that maybe had sunset. And I'm not naming [20:49] SPEAKER_04: them specifically the industries in general on the coastal zone of BC want to make the investment [20:55] SPEAKER_04: payoff in the long term, which means a greater attention to impacts on our environment. [21:01] SPEAKER_04: But if there are industries that that are not going to be with us in the future and particularly [21:07] SPEAKER_04: coastal industries, then seaweed agriculture provides a great transition to again jobs, high paying, [21:15] SPEAKER_04: high value jobs in the long run where they can be considered green or more alignment with the [21:22] SPEAKER_04: blue economy, which is a way that we can capture us more climate sustainability in coastal and marine [21:29] SPEAKER_03: industries. That's a perfect segue into, you know, you're not only farming, you're and earned [21:35] SPEAKER_03: in, but you're also knowledge sharing. And I mean, this is an amazing, you seem to be doing [21:41] SPEAKER_03: everything all at once, but I see cascadiat community building actually training farmers doing events. [21:50] SPEAKER_03: Tell me a little bit about why such a big focus as well on the knowledge sharing. [21:57] SPEAKER_04: It's a it's a nascent industry and our view of the world is we have the opportunity, [22:05] SPEAKER_04: as I said, we can't wait to change the world, but it won't be done by individuals or indeed by [22:12] SPEAKER_04: individual corporations. It needs to be built as a sector. So a strong foundation for any [22:19] SPEAKER_04: strict sector is in the knowledge base in which to do it. We talk about the knowledge economy [22:25] SPEAKER_04: all the time. Well, there's a prime example. If you build a strong foundation built on quality [22:30] SPEAKER_04: science and engineering mixed with marketing and sales in the new context in the gig economy, [22:40] SPEAKER_04: we're leveraging all that to to say we do that found at a foundational level. And we're very, [22:47] SPEAKER_04: very inclusive as an industry. We've spoken to every non-Asian seaweed producer. So all the g's [22:55] SPEAKER_04: sevens, but the the Western European and North American seaweed producers. So it's not that many. [23:05] SPEAKER_04: We've spoken to them all and we share all parts from as it's very few. So for example, [23:13] SPEAKER_04: what's the best size of production line? And we can write to our friends on the East Coast and [23:19] SPEAKER_04: say, well, what did you use? And they say, well, we use this or we use that or we use this firm design. [23:25] SPEAKER_04: Those are the kinds of things that we need to share. Again, in order to drive this industry, [23:31] SPEAKER_04: we need to do it at pace. And in order to do it at pace, we need extreme collaboration. [23:36] SPEAKER_04: Gorilla collaboration, we call it because I love it. Yeah, because you really don't have a choice. [23:42] SPEAKER_04: Our goal was to get seaweed farms in the water within six months. We did that. [23:49] SPEAKER_04: It's really key that together we pool the knowledge. There's so much room. The market [23:54] SPEAKER_04: demand. The market's been growing by six by eight to 14 percent globally. There are new products, [24:00] SPEAKER_04: new ideas coming out every single day for the uses of seaweed. And I can go through the market [24:07] SPEAKER_04: verticals that will give your listeners a chance to get a, oh my gosh, I didn't realize, [24:12] SPEAKER_04: you know, seaweed could be used for that. That's a daily trend around our offices and we try [24:18] SPEAKER_04: and spread the word. So there's plenty of room for competition. So I'm just going to touch on, [24:25] SPEAKER_03: I think we'll go back to that question, but I'm just going to remind everybody again, [24:28] SPEAKER_03: we're talking about how to use a seaweed farm to amplify your wealth, your community building, [24:35] SPEAKER_03: and your personal longevity. So first of all, as an entrepreneur, you're inspired, [24:42] SPEAKER_03: you imagine starting your own seaweed farm. What should they do? What's the pathway [24:49] SPEAKER_03: for the actual private farmer or entrepreneur to do? Get involved. [24:53] SPEAKER_04: Right. So if you can work for a seaweed farmer, if you're young and enthusiastic and want to go [25:01] SPEAKER_04: from the ground up, if you're old and enthusiastic, you know, fill your boots, talk to local farmers, [25:10] SPEAKER_04: maybe go to work for a local farmer if that was possible. And I say local, I mean community [25:14] SPEAKER_04: farms. Here's the challenge though. I would not be encouraging a thousand one hectare firms [25:24] SPEAKER_04: to come up on the coastal zone. I would be encouraging folks that if you're going to do it, [25:28] SPEAKER_04: you have to think at the right scale and that's a firm that's really a minimum of five to ten [25:35] SPEAKER_04: hectares. Okay. It will take you a long time to grow your business. So we're encouraging [25:43] SPEAKER_04: definitely more entrepreneurs in the sector to fill the need. We're open to all kinds of [25:50] SPEAKER_04: discussion. One of our one of our engineers here at Pasquedia, a phone a year ago and said, [25:57] SPEAKER_04: I really want to be a seaweed farmer. I've been a marine engineer for a few years. And this is my [26:03] SPEAKER_04: passion. And I said, well, he's asked me what the advice was. I said, well, he got a couple of choices. [26:09] SPEAKER_04: You can go it alone and we will help you. But we will really want to work with entities that [26:16] SPEAKER_04: are have visions to be larger and to support the sector build out. I said, or you can come to work for [26:22] SPEAKER_04: us, learn the ropes on our dime and then, you know, branch out and do this on your own. If that's [26:28] SPEAKER_04: what you really want to be, is that kind of an entrepreneur? And so for community builders, [26:34] SPEAKER_03: right, the policymakers, maybe the public servants, the other stakeholder groups, what can they do [26:41] SPEAKER_04: to embrace this unstoppable trend? Yeah, I would say a couple of things. I've just recently, over the [26:49] SPEAKER_04: last few months, virtually met with just about every municipality on Vancouver Island. And inevitably, [26:55] SPEAKER_04: the question comes, what can we do? So the first thing that you can do as an individual, [27:01] SPEAKER_04: apart from the obvious, you know, make sure that your local town council are as amenable to growth [27:07] SPEAKER_04: in businesses, are amenable to opening their minds to new forms of aquaculture that don't carry [27:14] SPEAKER_04: perhaps the baggage of more traditional kinds of aquaculture. As an individual, the best thing you can [27:22] SPEAKER_04: do is leave a healthy lifestyle with healthy eating to live longer so you can eat more seaweed. [27:29] SPEAKER_03: I love that. I just got to explore that. Can we just have a quick spitfire? What are all of the [27:38] SPEAKER_03: things that you imagine or that are actually being made by seaweed already as a consumer? Just spit [27:44] SPEAKER_04: balling. Yeah. So start the food highest and best value. From a business perspective, [27:50] SPEAKER_04: where after high margin, high volumes, if you can do it, so food. In order to do that, we have to [27:56] SPEAKER_04: change the hearts and minds of individuals and their natural eating habits in North America. [28:02] SPEAKER_04: Secondly, we're betting on a bovine feed. As a bovine feed supplement, we have the opportunity [28:09] SPEAKER_04: for the triple planetary bottom line. As you grow seaweed in the coastal oceans, you will see [28:16] SPEAKER_04: Quester carbon. If you're harvest and feed to cows, some species, you have the opportunity to [28:24] SPEAKER_04: reduce enteric methane by up to 90% or 95%. You can eliminate it as a GHG if we do the kind of [28:34] SPEAKER_04: investment in the engineering and the science and technologies to deliver that. The offshoot, [28:40] SPEAKER_04: the collateral benefit is that when you feed seaweed to cows, science has shown that you can [28:46] SPEAKER_04: also improve feed conversion ratio, some say by up to 30%. So that means when you add half a [28:53] SPEAKER_04: percent of seaweed to a cow's diet, it changes the energy dynamics in the cow's biome. [29:00] SPEAKER_04: You can reduce the amount of silage, maybe 30%, and water that you have to grow to feed the cow. [29:06] SPEAKER_04: So there's your triple bottom line because we can then repurpose land instead of having to [29:12] SPEAKER_04: grow it for silage, for cattle feed, we can grow it to support higher value crops that will be [29:18] SPEAKER_04: more sustainable. Bioplastics, there are companies right now that are refining seaweed for sodium [29:25] SPEAKER_04: alginate, which is a fundamental raw ingredient to the production of bioplastics. I mentioned [29:32] SPEAKER_04: neutrosuticals. If we eat healthily, we will live longer, as I said, that's the main goals, [29:39] SPEAKER_04: to have folks live longer from cascades perspective. We have the opportunity to supplement folks [29:46] SPEAKER_04: diet with those that may not have access to healthy local produce, for example. What a stat I saw [29:52] SPEAKER_04: was the other day was 5 grams of seaweed nutritionally is equivalent to a kilogram of vegetables. [30:03] SPEAKER_04: Terrestrial vegetables. I'm not going to stand here and say that that's true. I thought it was an [30:08] SPEAKER_04: interesting stat. So neutrosuticals. A cascadious, presently, bioprospecting because most of the [30:15] SPEAKER_04: 630 species have never been analyzed that will live out that hang out our shores, have ever been [30:20] SPEAKER_04: analyzed for the bioactive components. So we're bioprospecting as we deliver seaweed as a healthy [30:28] SPEAKER_04: supplement. There are probably other compounds within the seaweed that if we unlock them, [30:34] SPEAKER_04: we'll be able to deliver things like facoidin, as the name you might, your listeners may want to look [30:41] SPEAKER_04: up. It is supposedly, for example, outpaste is remdesivir as a COVID-19. Those sorts of anecdotes [30:50] SPEAKER_04: come to mind. One thing is clear, the nutritional value and the medicinal value of seaweed we have yet [30:56] SPEAKER_04: to explore and really exploit. Again, it comes back to doing it in harmony with our planet and that's [31:02] SPEAKER_04: a key thing. I heard that seaweed can be used to replace phosphates in detergent. [31:10] SPEAKER_04: So, yes, so if that is indeed a vertical that could be represented by the raw products that we [31:17] SPEAKER_04: produce, then we're actually supporting a ocean mitigation of the phosphates that end up in our [31:25] SPEAKER_04: oceans because of land use and community and global people practice of cleaning things with [31:32] SPEAKER_04: phosphates that eventually end up in the ocean and they don't really support a healthy ocean. [31:38] SPEAKER_03: That's just a few of the verticals. Well, in some of those access to those verticals, and I guess [31:43] SPEAKER_03: one privilege that we have in this day and age is, you know, our shopping is just as easily digital [31:49] SPEAKER_03: and global as it is the corner store. So, as a consumer, if I decide I would like, I can't even [31:56] SPEAKER_03: think of all those verticals, but I want to change up my, you know, my cleaning products in my home [32:01] SPEAKER_03: and I want to have neutral suitables. What was the? The bonus pet to help me live a person in a longer [32:14] SPEAKER_03: life as well as eating raw seafood. Can I buy from you online? Can I want to be a trend center? [32:20] SPEAKER_04: How can we help? Stay tuned. Our Cascadia Sea, we will be launching a brand of seaweed for consumers [32:31] SPEAKER_04: in May as part of a seaweed day is a global festival to celebrate the opportunity and the hope that [32:37] SPEAKER_04: exists with seaweed cultivation. There are tremendous number of verticals. You can go to your [32:44] SPEAKER_04: supermarket now. There's probably 10 to 12 products that you can buy. The vast majority come from [32:52] SPEAKER_04: Asia. So, that's another thing is that we have an ability to disrupt the supply of seaweed. 8,000 [32:58] SPEAKER_04: tons in 2019, 8,000 tons of seaweed was imported into North America. We have the ability to change [33:07] SPEAKER_04: that by a well-managed sector that that grows seaweed in the coastal zone. So, these are [33:13] SPEAKER_04: kinds of things that can be done and you'll eventually you can go online now and buy seaweed snacks [33:18] SPEAKER_04: and you can go to your local supermarket. Stay tuned for many, many more skews that are in favor of [33:25] SPEAKER_04: a more North American generalized palate. It's not this slimy, salty green stuff that you expect. [33:34] SPEAKER_04: It is really wholesome and by the way, if you need umami in your diet, if you want that sensation of [33:40] SPEAKER_04: flavor, then nutritionally would go to MSG. Seaweed is a very natural source of umami. In fact, [33:47] SPEAKER_04: the other one thing I didn't mention was body products. Whether you're talking about plant-based [33:53] SPEAKER_04: collagen, which can effectively come from seaweed or you're talking about the only vegan source of [33:59] SPEAKER_04: B12, which would be seaweed. So, those are things in folks that that live a healthy life and that turn [34:08] SPEAKER_04: to veganism to support their personal goals. We're going to be providing products that will help you [34:14] SPEAKER_04: with a variety of choices that allow you to maintain the diet and the lifestyle choices that [34:19] SPEAKER_04: you're making and give you way more flexibility and perhaps even entice more folks because the choices [34:26] SPEAKER_04: will be greater and the food sensations will be greater from more of a vegan approach to eating. [34:32] SPEAKER_04: This will only help improve I think Canadian diets and North American diets and so we do have a [34:39] SPEAKER_04: chance to change things and we're trying to take up that cudgel. Awesome. Bill, it is always a pleasure. [34:45] SPEAKER_03: I am we're on the same path. I'd like to live to be 147. So, I've got another 100 years [34:50] SPEAKER_03: ish in my belt. So, if this is one of those solutions, I look forward to it as well as helping build [34:58] SPEAKER_03: the regional economy. I'm very excited about that. So, thanks for joining us again today on Canada's [35:03] SPEAKER_03: podcast. You're welcome. Post podcast. How can we what's the best way to follow up with you? Would it be [35:09] SPEAKER_04: on the website? Yeah, you can write to us at info at cascadiacwe.com. Follow us on Instagram and we tune [35:18] SPEAKER_04: into all the social media channels and spread the word talk to your neighbors. This is something the [35:25] SPEAKER_04: opportunity that we have to deliver. We can't wait to change the world. Awesome. Thanks Bill. Talk to you [35:31] SPEAKER_01: again soon. Bye bye. Bold, vibrant, technological. In Let's Bridge, our spirit of innovation is more [35:40] SPEAKER_01: than just the way we do business. It's the way we live and the way we succeed. We'll help you to [35:46] SPEAKER_01: kickstart, innovate and grow in Let's Bridge. Southern Alberta's hub for innovation and technology. [35:53] SPEAKER_01: It's the bright, affordable choice for business builders. Go to chooseletthbridge.ca slash [35:59] SPEAKER_01: entrepreneur and we'll help you moving grow in Let's Bridge.
