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Seaweed CO2 Removal Hindered by Iron, Nutrients

May 28, 2026
in Earth Science
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Seaweed CO2 Removal Hindered by Iron, Nutrients — Earth Science

Seaweed CO2 Removal Hindered by Iron, Nutrients

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As the world intensifies efforts to mitigate the escalating climate crisis, innovative strategies for carbon dioxide removal (CDR) have become a focal point of scientific inquiry. One promising avenue involves harnessing the natural ability of seaweed, or macroalgae, to capture atmospheric CO2 through photosynthesis. This approach, often hailed as a sustainable and cost-effective method of reducing greenhouse gases, has garnered significant attention. However, groundbreaking new research led by Berger, Kwiatkowski, Bopp, and colleagues, published in Nature Communications (2026), reveals critical limitations that could substantially diminish the effectiveness of seaweed-based carbon sequestration. Their findings underscore the complex interplay between nutrient dynamics in marine ecosystems and the biochemical constraints on seaweed growth, with iron availability and competition from phytoplankton emerging as major barriers to large-scale deployment.

Seaweed, a highly productive marine organism, consumes CO2 from the surrounding water and atmosphere, converting it into biomass that can be transported to the deep ocean or coastal sediments, effectively removing carbon from the active carbon cycle for extended periods. This biological pathway has been considered an attractive CDR strategy because seaweed cultivation can be scaled up in oceanic environments without competing with terrestrial land use for crops. Yet, the new study delves into the intricacies of ocean chemistry, revealing that the availability of essential micronutrients, chiefly iron, is a pivotal control on the productivity of seaweed farms. Unlike terrestrial plants, which rely on nutrient-rich soils, marine macroalgae depend heavily on dissolved iron concentrations in seawater, which often exist at trace levels and vary widely across different ocean regions.

The authors conducted a comprehensive assessment of iron limitation in oceanic zones earmarked for potential seaweed cultivation. Their analysis incorporated sophisticated biogeochemical ocean models integrating nutrient cycling, marine plant physiology, and competition dynamics within phytoplankton communities. The results indicate that when large-scale seaweed farming is initiated, it creates a significant demand for iron, which is concurrently utilized by phytoplankton. This leads to heightened competition for iron, a nutrient foundational to photosynthesis and enzymatic functions in both seaweed and phytoplankton. Intriguingly, the competition tends to favor faster-growing phytoplankton species, further inhibiting seaweed growth and consequently limiting the net carbon sequestration potential.

Expanding on this feedback mechanism reveals a complex ecological trade-off. Phytoplankton, the microscopic photosynthetic organisms forming the base of marine food webs, possess faster nutrient uptake kinetics and can adapt rapidly to fluctuating nutrient conditions compared to macroalgae. As seaweed farms demand more iron, phytoplankton populations might flourish in proximal waters, overshadowing seaweed by monopolizing essential micronutrients. This ecological shift could inadvertently diminish the efficiency of seaweed-mediated carbon removal by reducing biomass accumulation rates and potentially altering local biogeochemical cycles in unforeseen ways.

The study also examined how varying nutrient regimes—beyond just iron limitation—impact seaweed productivity. Other macronutrients like nitrogen and phosphorus, often linked to eutrophication processes in coastal waters, also factor into the competitive environment. In oligotrophic (nutrient-poor) open ocean waters, iron stands out as the primary limiting micronutrient. However, in nutrient-enriched coastal zones, nitrogen competition may become more prominent. The authors caution that blanket assumptions about nutrient availability across diverse marine settings cannot suffice when planning seaweed-based CDR initiatives. Instead, a fine-tuned understanding of regional nutrient dynamics and species interactions is essential to maximize the carbon removal benefits of seaweed.

To quantify the scale of iron limitation effects, Berger and colleagues applied high-resolution computational models exploring different scenarios of seaweed cultivation size and locations. The model simulations projected that without supplemental iron inputs or adaptive farm management, the maximal CO2 removal achievable by seaweed-based CDR could be sharply curtailed by up to 50%. This is a striking revelation, as previous estimates largely ignored nutrient competition or assumed ideal growth conditions. The study thus challenges prior overly optimistic assumptions in seaweed carbon sequestration literature and calls for a recalibration of expectations around the feasibility and magnitude of this approach in climate mitigation portfolios.

Moreover, the researchers highlight potential strategies to overcome biogeochemical constraints. Artificial iron fertilization, a practice already tested in phytoplankton blooms for carbon sequestration, could theoretically enhance macroalgal growth but carries ecological risks such as harmful algal blooms or disruptions to food webs. Alternative approaches include selective breeding or genetic engineering of seaweed strains with enhanced iron uptake efficiency or resilience to nutrient stress. However, these technological interventions require extensive ecological risk assessments and regulatory considerations before widescale implementation.

The findings also carry profound implications for the economics of seaweed farming for carbon credits. The necessity of continual nutrient supplementation or carefully chosen farming locations with non-limiting nutrient profiles might inflate operational costs, affecting the cost-benefit calculus underpinning investment decisions. Policymakers and stakeholders must integrate nutrient limitation parameters into lifecycle assessments and carbon accounting frameworks to avoid unintended overestimations of carbon offset potentials from seaweed cultivation.

The study’s methodological rigor is notable in combining empirical field data on iron concentrations and phytoplankton biomass with cutting-edge ocean ecosystem modeling. This multipronged approach enables a nuanced understanding of microscopic-level chemical interactions magnified to ecosystem and global scales. The researchers’ collaboration across marine ecology, oceanography, and climate science exemplifies the interdisciplinary imperative to tackle complex environmental challenges innovatively.

Another critical insight emerges from the team’s attention to temporal variability. Seasonal and interannual fluctuations in ocean nutrient supply, driven by factors like upwelling, riverine inputs, and atmospheric deposition, create dynamic conditions for seaweed growth. The temporal mismatch between peak nutrient availability and matching seaweed growth phases could further dampen carbon sequestration efficiency. Adaptive farm design, including timing planting and harvesting to nutrient cycles, may provide partial relief, but cannot fully counteract persistent baseline limitations.

The interplay between biological, chemical, and physical ocean processes outlined in this research underscores the formidable complexity of implementing marine-based climate solutions at scale. It cautions against simplistic optimism and highlights the necessity of detailed ecosystem-level understanding to prevent unintended consequences. Seaweed farming for CO2 removal remains a promising tool but must be integrated within a portfolio of diversified, multi-pronged climate strategies.

Looking forward, the authors advocate for intensified research into nutrient cycling modifications under climate change scenarios. Ocean warming, acidification, and altered circulation patterns will likely affect nutrient distributions and bioavailability, potentially exacerbating or easing iron limitation in the future. Thus, continuous monitoring and adaptive management will be pivotal to ensuring seaweed-based CDR techniques remain viable and environmentally safe.

Overall, this illuminating study significantly advances our understanding of marine carbon sequestration and challenges the scientific community to refine and optimise bio-based CO2 removal approaches. It calls for caution, creativity, and concerted interdisciplinary collaborations to harness the oceans’ potential without compromising ecosystem integrity. For policymakers, investors, and climate innovators, it provides a critical reality check amid the urgent quest for scalable, effective carbon removal technologies.


Subject of Research: The limitations of seaweed-based carbon dioxide removal due to iron availability and nutrient competition with phytoplankton in marine ecosystems.

Article Title: Efficacy of seaweed-based carbon dioxide removal reduced by iron limitation and nutrient competition with phytoplankton.

Article References:
Berger, M., Kwiatkowski, L., Bopp, L. et al. Efficacy of seaweed-based carbon dioxide removal reduced by iron limitation and nutrient competition with phytoplankton. Nat Commun (2026). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-026-73168-z

Image Credits: AI Generated

Tags: biochemical constraints on seaweed biomasscarbon cycle reduction through macroalgaeclimate crisis carbon mitigation strategiesiron availability in ocean ecosystemslarge-scale seaweed farming challengesmacroalgae photosynthesis CO2 capturemarine ecosystem nutrient dynamicsmarine nutrient limitations seaweed growthphytoplankton competition seaweed cultivationseaweed carbon dioxide removalseaweed carbon export to deep oceansustainable ocean-based carbon sequestration
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