Regenerative Seawater Agriculture
What is RSA?
In an era where conventional agriculture relies heavily on expensive inputs and unsustainable water use, Regenerative Seawater Agriculture (RSA) emerges as an innovative and sustainable alternative.
By harnessing the infinite resource of seawater for agriculture and integrating cuttingedge aquaculture science, RSA presents a transformative approach to food production.
This model is not only environmentally friendly but also economically superior, offering significant financial returns to investors. With a strong foundation backed by extensive research and a commitment to eco-friendly practices, RSA is poised to redefine the standards of efficient, profitable, and sustainable food production on a global scale.
What does RSA produce?
As a highly diversified “stacked enterprise”, RSA generates income from diverse revenue streams: Shrimp, Fish, Salicornia, Oysters, Sea Cucumbers, Algae, Fodder, Biofuels, Blue Carbon, Biodiversity Credits, and More.
How is RSA a Zero-Waste System?
Every component in the system feeds the next, so the waste from one is the feedstock for another. Seawater enters the system but, unlike traditional fish farms, RSA generates no pollution, uses no biocides or synthetic fertilizers, and actually improves soils, biodiversity, and freshwater resources.
How does RSA impact biodiversity?
RSA creates prosperity while having a massive positive environmental impact. Previous generations of the technology resulted in a 1,000% increase in bird biodiversity alone, while restoring shallow aquifers, sequestering carbon and cooling local temperatures.
Has this been done before?
Yes, this is a proven successful model.
How Does it Work?
Our RSA Farm Components
Sea Cucumber Farm
Oyster Systems
Hatcheries
Seagrass
Restoration
Shrimp Tanks
Mangrove Agroforestry
RSA Systems
Salicornia, Algae
& Artemia
Seafood That Heals the Earth
RSA delivers on the promise of ‘seafood that heals the earth’, but it also contributes to food security and delivers fodder for animals, jobs for locals, and community resilience — all without the use of fresh water. In fact, it addresses 9 of the 17 UN Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs). We can feed the world AND heal the Earth.