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Morrisons backs 'seaweed for cattle' trial in push to cut emissions

The Yorkshire company is backing a trial that aims to cut methane emissions from farms

Seaweed could be fed to º£½ÇÊÓÆµ cattle in a bid to reduce methane emissions(Image: PA)

Supermarket chain Morrisons is backing a trial which will see cattle on British and Irish farms fed seaweed as part of a project aimed at cutting their methane emissions by almost a third.

The trial, which is being led by academics from Queen’s University, Belfast, will involve seaweed harvested from the Irish and North seas being added to animal feed in the participating farms.

Research in Australia and the US has already indicated that seaweed feeds can lead to a dramatic reduction – up to 80% – in gases released by cows and sheep through burping and flatulence. However, those experiments have used red seaweed that grows in warmer climates.

Scientists at the Institute for Global Food Security (IGFS) at Queen’s said red seaweed also contains high levels of bromoform, known to be damaging to the ozone layer.

Seaweed indigenous to the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ and Ireland tends to be brown or green and does not contain bromoform.

The IGFS academics said the homegrown seaweed also is rich in active compounds called phlorotannins, found in red wine and berries, which are anti-bacterial and improve immunity.

They said the feed could therefore have additional health benefits for animals.

The institute is involved in two projects to assess the effectiveness of the seaweed-based feed supplement for cattle.