Coral Vita
Coral Vita works to solve the threat of global coral reef degradation. More than 50% of reefs are dead and over 90% are on track to die by 2050. This ecological tragedy, which threatens 25% of marine life, is also a socio-economic catastrophe. Coral reefs directly support 1B people globally and conservatively generate $30B annually via tourism, fisheries production, and coastal protection. Their loss will be disastrous to society and to all of life on Earth.
We use breakthrough methods to grow corals up to 50x faster (microfragmenting) while strengthening their resiliency to climate change (assisted evolution). Our business model can sustainably finance large-scale restoration projects through eco-tourism and selling restoration as a service (RaaS), and our methods scale so that each farm can potentially supply an entire nation’s reefs with diverse and resilient coral. Through our work, we help preserve ocean life and community welfare for future generations.
We are working to solve two problems: preserving dying coral reefs and scaling reef restoration.
Coral reefs are dying at frightening rates, which may cause cataclysmic challenges for society. Their death is driven by poor development practices, overfishing, pollution, and climate change. Reef degradation threatens fishing communities and their families, coastal residents exposed to more powerful storm surges, and industries & national economies dependent on the draw of reef attractions in over one hundred nations.
The process of coral farming, where fragments are grown in farms and then installed into reefs, is scientifically-proven to revitalize reef health and benefits. But restoration – which has existed for two decades – is primarily executed by non-profits using ocean-based nurseries. Such nurseries only grow limited species, cannot enhance their resiliency to climate change, and must be built for each target reef. This process, especially when tied to the grant/donation model, does not sufficiently scale to solve the problem.
Coral Vita is addressing these problems by working to scale restoration globally. By growing more diverse, resilient, and affordable coral sustained by a land-based commercial farming model, we can achieve unprecedented and needed levels of restoration to keep reefs alive despite the threats they face.
Coral Vita’s ultimate vision is to establish a global network of land-based coral farms supplying restoration projections with mass quantities of diverse, resilient, and cost-effective coral.
Our methods directly help restore and increase the resilience of the local environment, which is particularly important in fragile and degrading ecosystems like coral reefs. Outplanting corals has been proven by countless other practitioners to increase coral cover. As well, we take great care to promote species and genetic diversity in our work, while physically boosting the resiliency of coral fragments to stressors such as warming and acidifying oceans. This in turn strengthens the overall resilience of the local environment by bolstering reefs ability to survive deteriorating oceanic conditions due to climate change. Our work further stabilizes and increases natural biodiversity. Increasing coral cover not only improves the health of various coral species, but the relevant marine life that depend on reefs.
To support this work, we sell RaaS to customers that depend on reefs valuable ecosystem services, including resorts, developers, coastal insurers, cruise lines, governments, and corporate sponsors. We also turn our coral farms into revenue-generating tourism attractions where guests can pay to experience coral farming and even adopt or plant coral.
Emphasizing community-based stewardship into our restoration work is a key part of our model. Ultimately, reef health most directly impacts dependent communities. Coral reefs are found in over 100 nations globally. In many areas, they are sources of cultural heritage, medicines, food, jobs, and protection from storms. As reefs die, their livelihoods are jeopardized.
Building local capacity and integrating local knowledge is critical to the long-term success of both our projects and promoting marine health. Our farms further function as education centers for community members and students, hoping to inspire a new generation of caretakers. Our farm managers will ideally be trained reef scientists from the host country. And we work with locals like fishermen, training them to be part of our coral installation team.
In Grand Bahama, where we launched our pilot coral farm in May 2019, we’ve welcomed hundreds of Bahamian students, environmental groups, government officials, fishermen, and other community members to experience our work. Following Hurricane Dorian last year, we used our resources to engage in search and rescue, deliver aid, and raise funds for communities impacted by the storm. Coral Vita is committed here and beyond to empowering communities as we protect reefs.
- Create scalable economic opportunities for local communities, including fishing, timber, tourism, and regenerative agriculture, that are aligned with thriving and biodiverse ecosystems
By regenerating reefs, catalyzing a novel ecosystem restoration market, and using our work to educate the public and engage local stakeholders about the urgent need to protect coral reefs, we are well-aligned with the Third Dimension. Global reef degradation is one of the world’s most difficult problems, threatening biodiversity, livelihoods, prosperity, and stability. We tackle this challenge by kickstarting a ‘Restoration Economy’ through innovative science and a market-based approach. By both preserving reef health and integrating communities into our model, we work to ensure biodiversity continues thriving alongside inclusive economic opportunities for locals.
- Growth: An organization with an established product, service, or business model rolled out in one or, ideally, several communities, which is poised for further growth.
Because of Hurricane Dorian and Covid19, we altered our growth and fundraising schedule. We had initially planned to raise a Series A of several million dollars around mid-2021. Due to the nature of the storm and revenue fall-off from the pandemic, we just concluded a $2M seed round to transform our pilot coral farm in Grand Bahama into a state-of-the-art facility. Based on both the funding parameters described in the FAQ and our track record relative to the FAQ’s description, we most closely align with the Growth stage. We’ve already demonstrate coral farming efficacy, launched restoration projects, used our farm as both an education center for locals and tourism attraction, and have achieved scientific and R&D successes. While we focus on our Bahamas work over the next 18 months, we’re already building out our pipeline for farms, customers, partners, and investors for future countries.
Co-Founder & Chief Reef Officer