Applications are now open for a second round of the £10 million UK Seafood Innovation Fund to transform the future landscape of the seafood industry.
The competition opened on 7 February 2020 and runs until 20 April 2020. The fund is seeking a new tranche of applicants with plans to transform the future landscape for seafood supply. Robotics, AI, fishing gear innovations and biomedical advances are just some of the innovations awarded funding in the first round.
Professor Fiona Lettice, Chair of the UK Seafood Innovation Fund Steering Group and Pro-Vice Chancellor of Research and Innovation at the University of East Anglia said ‘We are looking for projects that can genuinely transform or disrupt the seafood industry. These should be innovative ideas that aim to make a significant improvement to the future sustainability, profitability and efficiency of any part of the seafood sector.’
With UK fishing vessels landing nearly 700,000 tonnes of fish and shellfish a year – worth £989 million, the UK government is committed to rewarding innovative ideas that can make a significant improvement to the sustainability, profitability and efficiency of any part of the seafood sector.
Projects funded in 2019 span the seafood sector, from fishing boats to product sales. By researching and developing improved ways to sink longlines below the surface, one project aims to tackle the issue of seabird bycatch – improving fishing profitability for skippers in parallel. Another project will investigate how data can be better used in the industry, aiming to create efficiencies and resilience across the seafood supply chain, and facilitate compliance with fisheries management.
In the aquaculture sphere, R&D funding will support the development of ‘Inocubot 2’; an artificially intelligent robot designed to improve fish welfare and deliver economic efficiencies for fish farms. A project to create two new, high-value products for human consumption hopes to show off seaweed as a nutritious treat, and explore fertile opportunities to expand the UK’s kelp farming industry.
Launching its second open call for applications, the fund encourages bids from experts in the fishing, aquaculture, and seafood processing sectors. And Professor Lettice emphasises that SIF is also searching beyond the seafood sector: ‘We are keen to hear from innovative thinkers in tech, engineering, data science and app development, whose expertise could bring new insights to benefit the future of UK seafood.’ Collaborative consortia, that bring together established and new players for the first time, are also welcomed.
Applicants can bid for a portion of the £10 million fund, applying for up to £50,000 for a three-month feasibility study, or up to £250,000 to fund a research and development (R&D) project running for up to 18 months. Match funding is not essential, and all applications are subject to a highly competitive external review process.