Seambiotic, an Israeli clean-tech company is enlisting algae in the business of carbon capture.
While bureaucratic red tape has stymied Seambiotic’s commercial success in Israel, the pilot plant there has led to some positive developments for the company and the environment. Now, the company has five business deals in the works in the United States, Italy and in China, where it’s launching its first commercial algae farm this month. Seambiotic is also working with the National Aviation and Space Administration (NASA) in the United States to develop a commercially feasible biofuel variety from algae that has a higher freezing point that other plant-based biofuels from corn or sugarcane.






Turkish PM Erdogan on recent visit to Egypt; more energy influence at Israel’s expense.

