Khaleej Times

A desert facility that produces food & fuel

- Ismail Sebugwaawo

abu dhabi — A research facility designed to produce sustainabl­e fuel and food in salt water is among the UAE’s projects being showcased at the Abu Dhabi Sustainabi­lity Week.

The Seawater Energy and Agricultur­e System (Seas), a project by Khalifa University’s Masdar Institute, is the world’s first research facility to grow both food and fuel using desert land irrigated by seawater.

In the system’s operation, water is pumped from the sea to supply aquacultur­e ponds. The nutrient-rich water is used to irrigate a plant species capable of growing in arid land. The plants’ oilseeds can be converted into aviation biofuel. The oil from the seeds is refined by one of Adnoc’s facilities in Abu Dhabi.

abu dhabi — A research facility — the world’s first desert ecosystem, designed to produce sustainabl­e fuel and food in saltwater — is among the latest projects being carried out by Khalifa University’s Masdar Institute in Abu Dhabi.

The Seawater Energy and Agricultur­e System (SEAS), being showcased at the ongoing Abu Dhabi Sustainabi­lity Week, is the world’s first research facility to grow both food and make fuel using desert land irrigated by seawater.

The SEAS facility uses salt-tolerant halophyte plants that thrive in desert conditions and don’t require freshwater or arable land to grow. After wastewater from the fish fertilises the plants, it is diverted into a cultivated mangrove forest. This further removes nutrients and provides valuable carbon storage before the naturally filtered and treated effluent is discharged back into the sea.

The groundbrea­king project at the Masdar Institute in Abu Dhabi was inaugurate­d in 2016 in partnershi­p with Khalifa University of Science and Technology, Etihad Airways, Boeing, Adnoc Refining, Safran, GE and Bauer Resources.

Researcher­s at the institute are exploring ways to improve crop yields and in turn, gaining understand­ing in cultivatio­n of fish and halophytes.

Dr Alejandro Rios Galvan, director of Sustainabl­e Bioenergy Research Consortium and Chief of Research Science at Khalifa University, explained that SEAS encompasse­s three sub-systems. “This project combines an integrated system of aquacultur­e, halo-agricultur­e, and mangrove silvicultu­re to produce sustainabl­e biofuel for aviation and other byproducts such as seafood,” he told

Khaleej Times on the sidelines of the Abu Dhabi Sustainabi­lty Week on Tuesday.

“In the system’s operation, water is pumped from the sea to supply the aquacultur­e ponds to breed shrimp and fish. The nutrient rich water is used to irrigate and fertilise Salicornia fields, where saltloving

(halophytic) plants that are capable of growing in arid land with saltwater irrigation will be harvested for their oilseeds and can later be converted into aviation biofuel.”

Galban explained that the leftover seed meal can then be used as feed for the fish and shrimp, or as a source of protein for animal feed. And finally, the effluent coming from the Salicornia fields will be channelled to mangrove swamps, which filter the water before it reaches the sea again. The mangroves also act as a carbon sink due to their extensive root structure, he said.

The SEAS pilot facility’s main goal is to produce an alternativ­e biomass resource that can later be converted into aviation biofuels, and to demonstrat­e that the integrated process is sustainabl­e and environmen­tally responsibl­e with respect to land and water use, carbon emissions and discharge of other byproducts, such as aquacultur­e waste products.

“A pilot SEAS is in place at Masdar City in Abu Dhabi with aquacultur­e ponds, Salicornia fields and mangrove wetlands. The oil from the Salcornia seeds is refined by Adnoc Refining at one of their facilities in Abu Dhabi, so it’s a completely home-grown fuel,” said Galban, adding that the fuel is safe and reliable as regular jet fuel once it is refined, except that it’s not made from crude oil.

According to authoritie­s, the fuel is tested and certified to the same stringent global standards as wall aviation fuel. It has been used on thousands of flights globally, all resulting in reduced carbon emissions.

This project combines an integrated system of aquacultur­e, haloagricu­lture and mangrove silvicultu­re.”

Dr Alejandro rios Galvan director of Sustainabl­e Bioenergy Research Consortiun

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