HOW WE CAN CONVERT SEAWEEDS INTO BIOFUELS LIKE INDIA IS DOING
HOW WE CAN CONVERT SEAWEEDS INTO BIOFUELS LIKE INDIA IS DOING
Are we missing something obvious here? For
years now, the Philippines has been one of the world’s leading producers of
seaweeds. But what have we done with this advantage? We’ve confined ourselves
largely to food ingredients—carrageenan for ice cream and jellies, thickeners
for toothpaste and cosmetics, and additives for processed goods. Nothing wrong
with that. But have we considered that seaweeds could also fuel our future?
India has. In fact, Indian innovators have
already taken the lead in producing biofuels from seaweeds. A company called
Sea6 Energy, founded in 2010 by young engineers from IIT Madras, is pioneering
technologies to grow seaweeds in deep waters and convert them into “biocrude”
using a process called hydrothermal liquefaction. This is essentially a
fast-track version of what nature does to turn organic matter into fossil
fuels, but instead of millions of years, it happens in minutes.
Here’s the point: if India—with only 11,099
kilometers of coastline—can do this, why can’t we? The Philippines has 36,829
kilometers of coastline, more than three times that of India. And yet, we seem
either out of focus or simply unaware that seaweed biofuel should be part of
our energy strategy.
I’m not saying we should abandon the food and
ingredient side of the seaweed industry. No. All I’m saying is: we can do both.
At the start, perhaps, we can balance it—continue producing carrageenan and
other extracts for export, while piloting biofuel projects. Later, as
technologies improve and demand grows, we could prioritize biofuels.
Why? Because every liter of imported fuel we
substitute with local biofuel is money saved. And beyond savings, there’s also
the potential to generate carbon credits—seaweed absorbs huge amounts of CO₂
while growing, making it a natural carbon sink. This means that producing
biofuels from seaweeds could simultaneously reduce our import dependence and
strengthen our climate commitments.
Instead of asking who dropped the ball on this
opportunity, let us move forward and seize it now. But to do so, we need more
than rhetoric—we need a clear policy framework. In my view, this deserves a
dedicated law, one that integrates seaweed biofuels into our renewable energy
roadmap.
Who should lead this? I suggest the Department
of Energy (DOE), but not alone. The DOE should convene an inter-agency team
that includes the Department of Environment and Natural Resources (DENR), the
Department of Agriculture (DA), the Bureau of Fisheries and Aquatic Resources
(BFAR), and the Department of Trade and Industry (DTI). The National Economic
and Development Authority (NEDA) should also weigh in to project just how much
we could reduce fuel imports if seaweed biofuels are scaled up.
India is already showing us how to mechanize
ocean farming, how to build partnerships between innovators and oil companies,
and how to position seaweed as both an energy source and a climate solution.
Other countries—Japan, Norway, Indonesia, even Zanzibar—are also exploring
seaweed biofuels. So why not us?
The Philippines is already a seaweed giant.
But we are not yet a seaweed innovator. We are exporting raw material but not
capturing the higher value that comes from transforming it into energy,
bioplastics, or advanced biochemicals. Isn’t this the same trap we’ve fallen
into with so many other commodities—coconuts, bananas, even minerals—where we
supply the raw goods and others reap the biggest profits from finished
products?
Seaweed biofuels could be our way out of that
trap. Imagine coastal barangays not just farming seaweeds for export but also
running local facilities that process biomass into bio-crude or biogas. Imagine
a Philippines where fishing communities are also energy producers, where rural
livelihoods are strengthened, and where we are less dependent on volatile
global oil markets.
This is not a far-fetched dream. It is already
happening elsewhere. All we need is the vision—and the political will—to make
it happen here.
So here is the challenge: will the Philippines
remain just a supplier of raw seaweed for foreign processors, or will we dare
to lead in seaweed innovation for fuel and energy?
If India can do it with far less coastline, surely,
we—with three times more—have no excuse.
Ramon
Ike V. Seneres, www.facebook.com/ike.seneres
iseneres@yahoo.com,
09088877282, senseneres.blogspot.com
11-03-2025
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