A Trinidad-based environmental innovation group is offering its expertise to Government as it moves to tackle the annual sargassum invasion, saying the seaweed can be converted into fertiliser and other agricultural products to strengthen food security.
In a media release on Friday, SynergySphereCASA (SSCasa) welcomed the sargassum-to-wealth initiative announced by Rural Development and Local Government Minister Khadijah Ameen, following Government's acquisition of specialised beach-clearing tractors with support from the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP) and the Government of Japan.
The organisation said while the new equipment addresses the challenge of collecting sargassum from beaches, it is proposing a processing system to convert the harvested biomass into commercial products.
Chief executive officer Sam Wilson said Government's investment in collection equipment creates an opportunity to establish a local processing industry.
"The Ministry and its international partners have successfully built the bridge from beach to baseline. With the heavy collection equipment now active, our 'Blue Gold' framework offers a ready-made processing ecosystem. We do not need to reinvent the wheel. We can immediately absorb this raw biomass and convert it into high-value organic fertilizers and rapid-compost alternatives that protect our agricultural future."
The proposal follows a presentation made by the organisation to the CARICOM Ministerial Task Force in January. SSCasa said its strategy aligns with CARICOM's "25 by 2025 + 5" initiative, which seeks to reduce the region's dependence on imported food by expanding local agricultural production.
The group's framework centres on three areas: harvesting sargassum before it reaches shore, processing it into fertilisers and soil conditioners, and supporting climate-resilient agriculture through modular farming systems.
SSCasa said its model has already been introduced in Grenada, Barbados, Antigua and Tobago, with plans to expand to St Lucia, and is now seeking to implement the approach more extensively in Trinidad and Tobago.
The organisation said it wants to work alongside the Ministry of Rural Development and Local Government, municipal corporations and the National Sargassum Task Force to develop local processing facilities capable of creating employment and generating economic activity in coastal communities.
It also said international partnerships could support the introduction of technologies for producing bioplastics and accelerating compost production from sargassum.
SynergySphereCASA describes itself as a regional environmental innovation group focused on circular economy projects, climate resilience and sustainable development across the Caribbean.