Regenerative Resources Co
We solve a gordian knot of problems--poverty, biodiversity loss, ecological degradation, and food and water scarcity,within a specific bioregion: desertified and degraded coastal areas in the tropics and subtropics.
Our solution is the world's first regenerative aquaculture, which we call Regenerative Seawater Agroforestry (RSA). We use the effluent from shrimp aquacultures to grow mangrove wetlands & forests, and in turn grow the aquaculture feed from the same forests, creating a circular, closed loop, regenerative system.
There are over 15 million hectares globally where this system is applicable, with astounding potential. Deployed globally, this system will sequester gigatons of carbon, provide habitat for thousands of species, and increase freshwater resources, while creating circular, regenerative economies and lifting hundreds of thousands of people out of poverty.
We are solving the problem of resilient ecosystems, particularly with mangroves, by creating scalable mangrove agroforestries that enable reforestation, afforestation, restoration, and conservation.
Mangrove deforestation is a global problem, affecting millions of people, and also deeply affecting the health of our oceans. About half of the world's mangroves have been lost since 1970, with aquaculture and agriculture as the primary causes of deforestation.
The primary factors of this degradation are related to an old and deep pattern--that we as a species solve environmental issues by exacerbating human ones, or we solve human issues by exacerbating environmental problems. Our systems combine the two, such that we can create economies that heal mangrove ecologies. Functionally, this means creating new indigenous patterns whereby people act as a keystone species to heal and steward ecosystems, that in turn enable the people to build wealth.
Mangroves are a critical ecosystem--they cover only 2% of ocean space, but are responsible for 50% of sediment carbon sequestration of the oceans. More than 60% of all ocean species rely on mangroves during key parts of their life cycle. Mangroves offer the greatest protection against sea level rise and hurricanes.
Regenerative Seawater Agroforestry (RSA) can be deployed at any latitude where mangroves grow. Using seawater and aquacultures, we grow mangrove alleycropping systems, mangrove woodland, and mangrove wetlands. Each component has a separate management protocol, but together they function as a non-polluting, closed-loop, regenerative system.
RSA transforms degraded landscapes into productive ecologies, and has significant effects both economically and ecologically.
ECONOMIC EFFECTS:
RSA produces shrimp, finfish, mushrooms, biofuels, animal fodder, wood products, biochar, micro & macro algaes, and shellfish, and the externalities of this system are the growth of new mangrove ecosystems. As a commercial system it forms the backbone of new regenerative economies where poverty & degradation are prevalent.
ECOLOGICAL EFFECTS:
In our first iteration of this system, in Eritrea, the number of bird species living on site increased from 25 to over 230. Floods that would have run into the sea instead were intercepted and began to refill shallow aquifers. Measurements on carbon sequestration lead us to estimate that by year 6, the entire system becomes net carbon sequestering.
In other words, this is an economic system that increases biodiversity, increases fresh water, creates soil & sequesters carbon, while lifting people out of poverty.
There are four major applications we are developing for this system:
1: Creating new economies in fishing communities.
In Laguna San Ignacio, a UNESCO biosphere and whale sanctuary in Baja California Sur, Mexico, fishing villages are partnering with us to develop RSA along their coastlines. In these communities, their catch has decreased by 90% in the last decade, and their fishery faces a total collapse. By establishing RSA systems in these communities, we can provide jobs for every single fisherman, and give the fishery rest for multiple years. Parallel to this economic development, we are working with them to reforest 8000 hectares of mangroves within the biosphere, to assist in increasing the health of the fishery, and to provide a better nursery for the baby Pacific Gray Whales that are born here every year. After the fishery has enough years of rest to recover, we will work to implement sustainable fishery management. The mangrove conservation and rest provided to the fishery are enabled by our RSA system and the economic space it creates for the people.
This pattern is relevant across thousands of villages in the globe, and we have had some leads in Senegal, Ghana, and other areas of W. Africa to engage in similar projects.
2: Retrofitting existing aquaculture facilities.
Aquaculture is a dirty and polluting industry in general, and is one of the main industries responsible for the loss of mangroves globally. We can retrofit many of the aquaculture facilities to stop polluting and become the source of nutrient to grow mangrove forests & wetlands. In turn we can help make these facilities more cost effective and resilient, as we have a proprietary aquaculture feed in development that is produced by the same mangrove agroforestries we grow.
3: Drought-proof animal fodder without the use of freshwater.
Much of the Middle East and East Africa rely on imported fodder from Australia and the United States for their dairy & meat industries. Oftentimes, the production of this fodder is a major stress to water resources. For instance, Saudi Arabia's largest dairy is consuming enormous amounts of water in Southern California and Arizona to produce alfalfa, which is shipped to dairies north of Riyadh. Through our RSA system we can produce 100% of the fodder needs in these regions, without the use of freshwater. This has significant implications for water & food security globally, but particularly in regions where nomadism and pastoralism are still a strong part of the culture, but where freshwater resources are scarce.
4: Seawater Intrusion into coastal aquifers.
In the gulf of Mexico, seawater intrusion is leading to coastal aquifers becoming more and more brackish. In Texas, this is already starting to threaten farms that are near the coast, as traditional farming and grazing systems cannot handle the salinity. Our RSA system is deeply relevant here--as they can contribute to the greater health of the mangrove ecologies on the coast, while making use of brackish water to maintain the productivity of these landscapes.
These are four major applications of our RSA system that we are working to deploy--with projects in Mexico, Texas, and Namibia as our likely first installments. We have decades of experience in approaching and managing projects across multicultural and multilingual teams, and are dedicated to deep partnerships with local communities, who in the end will manage and operate these systems. For instance, we have spent over 18 months developing relationships with the fishing villages we are partnering with in Laguna San Ignacio, having held multiple townhall meetings, and developed relationships with NGO's, local politicians, and other stakeholders. In Namibia, we are partnering with local governments and local businesses in a public-private partnership, and guided by our local partners in all aspects of our project development.
- Create scalable economic opportunities for local communities, including fishing, timber, tourism, and regenerative agriculture, that are aligned with thriving and biodiverse ecosystems
Unless people become stewards of their ecologies, we will continue to degrade them as they are the primary source of the resources we use to live. Where ecological degradation and poverty are deeply intertwined, we create wealth by engaging in ecological regeneration. Just as people are the primary cause of degradation, people can also be the primary solution to healing our world, and that requires establishing regenerative systems that align people's incentives with ecological health and lead to the creation of new indigenous patterns. This is what our systems do.
- Pilot: An organization deploying a tested product, service, or business model in at least one community.
We did the first iteration of our RSA system in Eritrea, from 1999-2004. By year three we had 800 employees, were exporting a ton of shrimp to the EU annually, and had a women's co-op that managed the community's fodder & grazing animals. Unfortunately, this system was too successful, as it was seized by the Eritrean Army in 2004, and we were forced to burn our records at gunpoint, and given 48 hours to leave the country.
So while we have already done a prototype, we have no system currently in operation. We tried to get another system going in Egypt in 2009, which was stymied by the Arab Spring.
Today we have revamped the business model, financial modeling, our product stream, and our strategy, and are ready to deploy iterations of Regenerative Seawater Agroforestry with our first three projects in Mexico, Namibia, and Texas.

Founder