• WHO WE ARE
  • CONTACTS
  • PARTNERS
  • ADVERTISING
  • NEWSLETTER
Monday, June 16, 2025
BlueLifeHub
  • Home
  • News
  • Fishing
  • Aquaculture
  • Environment
  • Players
  • Innovation
  • Events
  • Integrated Activities
No Result
View All Result
Blue Life Hub
  • Home
  • News
  • Fishing
  • Aquaculture
  • Environment
  • Players
  • Innovation
  • Events
  • Integrated Activities
No Result
View All Result
Blue Life Hub
No Result
View All Result
Home Aquaculture

New spaces for agriculture in the ocean

With this innovative technology, Alora has succeeded in genetically modifying rice plants, making them capable of withstanding salinity levels of up to 16 grams of salt per litre of water, despite the fact that traditional rice is known to be extremely sensitive to salinity.

Editorial staff by Editorial staff
September 5, 2023
in Aquaculture, Innovation, News
Reading Time: 2 mins read
0
New spaces for agriculture in the ocean

New spaces for agriculture in the ocean

New space for agriculture in the ocean – Starting in 2019, the pioneers of the Canadian agricultural start-up Alora, Rory Hornby and Luke Young, have set themselves the ambitious goal of revolutionising the way we grow land-based crops through genetic engineering.

Alora’s mission is to ‘activate’ salinity tolerance in land-grown plants, such as rice, in order to tackle world hunger while minimising the use of precious fresh water during the cultivation process. In parallel, the company aims to solve the problem of methane emissions often associated with traditional rice cultivation techniques. This is achieved by growing rice in irrigated soils with salt water, an environment that hinders the growth of methane-emitting bacteria.

As Alora’s sustainability manager Rory Hornby explains, ‘We reactivate that dormant salt tolerance. So these plants can thrive, whether they’re floating on the surface of the ocean, or in soils that have been irrigated or affected by rising sea levels, climate change, or overuse of fertilisers’.

With this innovative technology, Alora has succeeded in genetically modifying rice plants, making them capable of withstanding salinity levels of up to 16 grams of salt per litre of water, despite the fact that traditional rice is known to be extremely sensitive to salinity. Alora’s goal is to go further, reaching a tolerance of 24 grams per litre by the end of the year.

Alora is currently engaged in a pilot project in Singapore, aiming not only to increase the salt tolerance of rice crops, but also to test a structure that would facilitate the growth of crops directly above the ocean.

Aiming to have the first farm site fully operational in a year or so, Alora aims to spread this idea globally by 2026, with Kenya, Namibia, Madagascar, India and the United States among the possible destinations for ‘ocean’ rice fields.

Promoting Alora’s vision for sustainable agriculture, Luke Young, the company’s co-founder, shared his hopes for the project’s development, anticipating that “starting around 2025, we’re going to start looking at the possibility of connecting different technologies to these farms at the same time. So renewable energy sources, solar panels, for example, or tidal waves or actual wave power generation systems’.

New spaces for agriculture in the ocean

Tags: agricoltureaquacultureblue economyblue transformation
ShareShareTweetSend
Previous Post

Floating wind and marine energy. US invests in research

Next Post

Lomé, African capital of the blue economy from 26 to 28 September

Editorial staff

Editorial staff

Related Posts

FAO updates global overview of marine fish stocks

FAO updates global overview of marine fish stocks

by Editorial staff
June 12, 2025

FAO updates global overview of marine fish stocks - According to a report presented at the United Nations Ocean Conference...

Gaza’s First Fisherwoman (Madleen Kallab) Inspires Bold Humanitarian Voyage Amid Growing Blockade Crisis

Gaza’s First Fisherwoman (Madleen Kallab) Inspires Bold Humanitarian Voyage Amid Growing Blockade Crisis

by Editorial staff
June 11, 2025

Gaza’s First Fisherwoman (Madleen Kallab) Inspires Bold Humanitarian Voyage Amid Growing Blockade Crisis - Off the coast of Sicily, a...

Bloom the European Pact for the Oceans is a gift to fishing lobbies

Bloom: the European Pact for the Oceans is a gift to fishing lobbies

by Editorial staff
June 10, 2025

Bloom: the European Pact for the Oceans is a gift to fishing lobbies - It was supposed to mark a...

Vietnam conquers Egypt with canned tuna

Vietnam conquers Egypt with canned tuna

by Editorial staff
June 9, 2025

Vietnam conquers Egypt with canned tuna -  Tuna exports to Egypt represent a strategic opportunity for Vietnamese companies. In the...

Next Post
Lomé African capital of the blue economy from 26 to 28 September

Lomé, African capital of the blue economy from 26 to 28 September

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Categories

 

Newsletter

Blue Life Hub

The goal of Blue Life Hub is to inform and network between players in the Mediterranean and Africa, areas that have very important commonalities and shared interests.

Categories

  • Fishing
  • Aquaculture
  • Environment
  • Players
  • Innovation
  • Events

Follow us on:

Stock images by Depositphotos

  • WHO WE ARE
  • CONTACTS
  • PARTNERS
  • ADVERTISING
  • NEWSLETTER

© 2023 INRETE S.R.L. P.Iva: 02557660814 -Blue Economy & Transformation news by In Rete.

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • News
  • Fishing
  • Aquaculture
  • Environment
  • Players
  • Innovation
  • Events
  • Integrated Activities
  • Who We Are
  • Contacts
  • Partners
  • Advertising
  • Newsletter

© 2023 INRETE S.R.L. P.Iva: 02557660814 -Blue Economy & Transformation news by In Rete.

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In

Add New Playlist