º£½ÇÊÓÆµ

Oops.

Our website is temporarily unavailable in your location.

We are working hard to get it back online.

PRIVACY
Economic Development

Cornwall seaweed farm plan buried 'once and for all' following campaign

The Marine Management Organisation has officially suspended the planning applications indefinitely after fierce opposition from local residents in Port Isaac

The proposed seaweed farm from Biome Algae in Port Quin Bay near Port Isaac have now been suspended for good by the MMO (Image: Scarrabine Farm)

Proposals for two enormous seaweed farms off Cornwall's coastline have collapsed after the Marine Management Organisation (MMO) formally suspended the planning applications indefinitely.

Local residents in Port Quin, near Port Isaac, supported by Cornwall-loving celebrities including Doc Martin actor Martin Clunes and Walking Dead star Andrew Lincoln, have been campaigning against proposals by Biome Algae alongside Camel Fish Limited to establish two seaweed farms equivalent to 140 football pitches in Port Quin Bay for over a year.

The initial application submitted in July 2023 to the Maritime Management Organisation received no objections, which local campaigners attributed to insufficient awareness within the community.

Once residents became informed of the proposals they mobilised, resulting in over 712 submissions with 94.9 per cent rejecting the scheme.

Consequently, the maritime organisation instructed the applicants to return with improved plans or face rejection of their applications, reports .

Biome Algae and Camel Fish Limited responded accordingly with an extensive 624-page document earlier this year.

Within their submission, the companies argued that the seaweed farms would play "a strong role" in delivering local employment, education, and career opportunities, whilst "supporting local businesses as service/equipment providers or supplying them with farmed seaweed and seaweed-derived products".

If constructed, the pair of seaweed farms would have seen 144 160-metre longlines positioned in the bay throughout September over two to three years, with seeded lines being fitted in October and early November every year.