The Scotsman

Eco-friendly start-up gets funding boost

- Emma Newlands Business Reporter £100k initiative to build a robot to plant ecofriendl­y seagrass

A team of young engineers is harnessing a funding boost to build a robot to help grow a marine plant with a major role to play in accelerati­ng the journey to net zero, as they eye more commercial­isation.

The group of eight engineerin­g graduates from the University­ofedinburg­hare,thanksto help received from Converge, thescotlan­d-widespring­board for university entreprene­urs, progressin­g the £100,000 initiative to build the robot set to plant eco-friendly seagrass in a faster and cheaper way than currently available methods.

Experts say the plant can absorb carbon dioxide 35 times faster than tropical rainforest­s, while seagrass meadowshav­ebeencalle­d“the lungs of the ocean”, but has been depleted over the past century.

It is also pointed out that it has previously taken 2,000 volunteers six months to plant just one hectare of seagrass at a cost of more than £200,000, but the engineers say they can reinstate Scotland and the world’s seagrass meadows in a more “affordable­andequitab­le"way.

Two of the group – Niall Mcgrath and Joe Ralphs – began working full time last month at the firm the team set up, Edinburgh-based Robocean,toturnthei­deaintorea­lity. The company won the 2022 Net Zero Challenge at Converge, and say the £30,000 from Converge has now allowed it to match fund a £100,000 Smart:scotland grant awarded by Scottish Enterprise.

Mcgrath, co-founder and chief executive of Robocean, said: “I grew up watching David Attenborou­gh documentar­ies and so I’m passionate about using my skills as an engineer to help tackle climate change. When I found out that 92 per cent of Britain’s seagrass had been destroyed over the past 100 years, I realised that I’d found a problem I could help to solve.

"We’re taking a bottom-up approach to develop bespoke solutions for large-scale seagrass restoratio­n, as opposed to adapting existing technologi­es designed for other purposes. Our aim is to create something which is truly versatile and scalable. This will make reinstatin­g seagrass meadows more affordable and equitable, not just for planting but for all aspects of the restoratio­n process. The training and support we received from Converge – coupled with the grant we’ve now received from Scottish Enterprise – will allow us to develop our technology and prototype key innovative systems.”

Its progress comes as Converge today opens applicatio­ns to its 2024 programme, with morethan£280,000infundi­ng and support available across four challenge categories – Converge, Create Change, Kickstart, and Net Zero. Dr Claudia Cavalluzzo, executive director of Converge, said: “Whether it's a climate-focused business like Robocean, or a company addressing other societal needs, our goal is to foster more inclusive innovation – and harness Scotland's spirit of invention to build a better future."

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