Green Tides
Green Tides Symposium
Call for Participants now OPEN
21-25 September 2026. View the call here.
Deadline: 17 April
Algal blooms are intensifying globally, driven by rising nutrient inputs and global warming, generating vast quantities of biomass that threaten aquatic ecosystems and coastal communities. This project looks to these events and reframes them as catalysts for climate adaptation.
By linking the scientific study of bloom dynamics with innovation in algae-based materials and technologies, the project aims to generate new insights into resource recovery, sustainable algae harvesting and regional biomanufacturing. Bridging fundamental research in marine science and algal biology with systems and transition design, the project investigates how algal blooms can be transformed from ecological burden into a bioregional opportunity.
Focusing on coastal regions severely affected by green tides, the project examines the socio-ecological impacts of bloom events to surface novel mitigation systems and creative strategies that can support coastal community resilience and regional adaptation. Green Tides establishes an international network of scholars, policy makers, industry and design practitioners with the aim to advance interdisciplinary frameworks and widen pathways for algae in the circular bioeconomy.
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LUMA Arles and Atelier LUMA
French Alternative Energies and Atomic Energy Commission
This project is supported by
The Australian-French Association for Research and Innovation.
The Australian Government through Creative Australia, its principal arts investment and advisory body.
The ZiF Centre for Interdisciplinary Research, Bielefeld University.