[00:00:02.03]
[gentle instrumental music]
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- Really just grab the tie
again and pull it through.
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- How can we continue to keep
Maine exactly like it is?
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The way to do that is by
keeping people on the water
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and keeping people invested in the things
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that they love to do.
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Kelp grown here can help
fishing communities adapt
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to climate change by also
mitigating some of its effects.
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[uptempo electronic music]
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- [Voiceover 1] The way we farm today
[00:00:46.00]
will not sustain human
civilization as we know it.
[00:00:51.00]
- [Voiceover 2] There's
not gonna be enough water
[00:00:52.07]
and there's not gonna be enough land.
[00:00:57.00]
- [Voiceover 1] We are
never going to replace
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traditional agriculture,
but we sure can innovate.
[00:01:03.09]
- [Voiceover 3] We can
learn how to at least pivot
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and to work with this changing world.
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[music continues]
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- We are so dependent
on the lobster fishery.
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All the other fisheries
are gone for the most part.
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And this lobster industry,
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while it's doing well,
is terrifyingly volatile.
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[gentle instrumental music]
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The Gulf of Maine is warming
faster than 99% of oceans
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in the world.
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We have a perfect
temperature here right now
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for lobster to thrive.
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And just a few more degrees in the water,
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that is no longer gonna be the case.
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[music continues]
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- Yeah, right here is fine.
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We don't have to go all
the way out and around.
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When I was a kid,
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we used to go out five, six
days at a time, my father and I,
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and it was just part of life.
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Yeah, I never thought twice about it.
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Yeah, I love it.
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- We were kind of looking
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into the different types of aquaculture
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that we could get fishermen
into, oysters and mussels.
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At the time, seaweed was
becoming more and more
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in consumer's diets through
sushi, through seaweed salads,
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through seaweed snacks.
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It became very clear to us
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that kelp was a tremendous
opportunity for fishermen.
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It's grown in the winter,
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which is counterseasonal to lobster.
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It uses the exact same
equipment as lobstering does.
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- Yeah, the kelp knives!
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- In addition, kelp can
also help mitigate some
[00:03:03.03]
of the effects of climate change
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by removing carbon and
nitrogen from the water.
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[gentle ambient music]
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So my plan when I was a kid
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was not necessarily to be in kelp
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or seaweed in general.
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I grew up in Central Pennsylvania,
which had long been known
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for its lumber and natural
resource-based economies.
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Most of the industry
had long left the place,
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and it was a pretty depressed place,
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and it's really informed the
way that I have seen the world.
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Ocean Approved needed to go
on to kind of the next step
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for the marketing and branding
and better kelp farming,
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and they had just harvested
about 30,000 pounds of kelp.
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The lobster fishermen,
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they're incredibly competent on the water,
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and they have all the equipment they need
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to farm aquaculture.
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Our promise to them
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always has been, we'll give you free seed,
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'cause we have to grow
all of our seed in house.
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You don't just put out lines
and kelp just grows on it.
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And then we have a buyback guarantee
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for every single blade
of kelp that they grow.
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Here we are three years
later, and this year
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we're working with 27 partner farmers,
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most of whom are fishermen.
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After Covid, we did a pivot into retail.
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When I say pivot, I mean a Hail Mary.
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That's really what it felt like,
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'cause suddenly not only did
we not have those customers,
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but we had 450,000 pounds of kelp
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that we had to harvest in 3 months,
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and all the payments for that kelp
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and all the ways to process it.
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- [Sue] How much does this weigh?
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- About 1,000 pounds.
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And this just came off
a farm this morning,
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and this is our harvest bag
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that people harvest the kelp into.
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I don't have a knife on me.
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- [Man] I do!
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- I got it.
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And you can just eat it right off--
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Well, we'll check out the farms too.
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You can eat it right off the farm.
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We did it.
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We'd get on these retailer calls
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and act like we're totally fine,
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like, "Oh, we don't really
need this business."
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And we had some incredible
support from retailers
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that was beyond my imagination.
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Kelp is now very much being seen
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as not only climate friendly,
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but also incredibly nutrient
dense and different.
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If we say nothing about
its climate benefits,
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nothing about its nutrition,
still just tastes good.
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Matt is doing a lot of
our recipe innovation.
[00:06:05.09]
So Matt, what kind of new
things are we working on?
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- Some vegan fish sauce.
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So I'm currently fermenting
some of our fresh kelp
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with a couple of different
blanched mushrooms,
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and then some ginger and onions
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and then let it go for a little bit,
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and then blend in some miso
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and tamari to keep it gluten free
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and hopefully tasting delicious.
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- Our whole mission is to
focus on getting more fishermen
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in the water, but the way to
do that is to drive demand.
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And the way to drive demand
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is to make everything taste outstanding.
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So when we're selling to wonderful chefs,
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we're not talking about our mission,
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we're talking about, like,
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"Hey, this is really
good to wrap around fish.
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"It keeps the juices in."
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Or, "Sprinkle a little bit
of this on your ramen,"
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or, "Put this in your pesto."
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Kelp is not a silver
bullet for climate change.
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I think right now, people are
looking for silver bullets.
[00:07:04.01]
It's all well and good, but
we need to change our habits.
[00:07:07.09]
What kelp does is it helps
people make better choices
[00:07:11.07]
about what's on their plate.
[00:07:22.05]
[upbeat instrumental music]
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[music continues]