From a cabin in Bamfield to farms in Norway, BC, and Chile, Majid turned a post-university odd job into one of the most thoughtful seaweed operations in North America. In this episode, we put the gold rush headlines to the test. Is kelp farming a life-changing opportunity, or is it just good old clickbait?
What you'll learn
- The $10k Per Hectare Reality Check: Why there's a "sweet spot" of 10–20 hectares for a sustainable income — and why going bigger doesn't mean earning more.
- Three Farm Designs, One Vision: Long lines, grid systems, and wild restoration — and why Majid believes mimicking Mother Nature is both the most ecological and most financially viable approach.
- The KelpSpot Innovation: How a specialised bio-glue and a mobile seeding machine are eliminating the most labour-intensive step in kelp farming — and why it matters most for restoration, not production.
- The Licensing Bottleneck: Why it can take 2–3 years (or cost $1 million in California) just to get approval to put anything in the water — and what that means for the industry's future.
- The Carbon Claim Problem: Why Majid urges serious caution around carbon sequestration claims, and why biodiversity impact is a far more honest measure of seaweed farming's value.
- Wild Ranching vs. Farming: The Tesla vs. restored classic car analogy that reframes how we think about what "sustainable" seaweed farming actually looks like.
The novice corner — Niall's journey
Hearing Majid talk so honestly about the financial realities — the $50k startup costs, the per-hectare margins, the licensing wait times — grounded something for me. I came in excited by the headlines. I'm leaving this conversation with a spreadsheet. That's probably a good sign. His point about coastal fishermen already having the skills, tools, and lifestyle for this work is something I keep coming back to as I plan my own next steps.
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