Our mission is to do our part in the restoration of ocean health by
reducing impacts on natural ocean habitats.
As aquaculture provides an increasing majority of seafood worldwide, the impact on natural environments increases at an alarming rate due to increasing wild catch, waste, and poor practices.
We can reduce impacts on oceanic ecosystems by making it more profitable to produce feedstocks using sustainable methods than harvesting wild species from the sea.
HabiSea Funds projects that promise efficient and sustainable
land-based aquaculture that empowers community self-sufficiency.
HabiSea Foundation supports the development of Automated Aquaculture systems that scale from single units for hobbyists to many units supporting entire communities. Your involvement helps grow and improve the network of interconnected operators. Fund a project, donate to a geography, a specific benefactor, or an initiative. If you’re a community leader, start your own HabiSea initiative today.
Local economies benefit by reduced dependency on imports. Learn how you can empower change by backing loans, grants and productive policy changes.
If your cause is community self-sufficiency or ocean health, learn how community level grants and programs can make a real impact in your area.
HabiSea’s bottom up approach makes immediate and efficient use of your donation. Your donation can be directed to Technological Advancement of Automated Systems or to offset the costs of deployment for a community project,
Help lead your community or group to self-sufficiency. Create a community program with our turn-key systems and help others learn valuable skills in aquaculture, hydroponics, and business.
If you have special skills you think might be helpful to our cause please reach out and let us know. We’re looking for those with experience in any of the following areas who wish to be advisors or hands-on:
marine biology
habitats
feed development and delivery
water sampling technologies
sensors and IoT
machine learning
big data
governmental / NGO policy and projects
community development