So you've heard the buzz, right? Aquaculture and carbon markets. It sounds like one of those perfect, shiny solutions: farm fish, capture carbon, make money, save the planet. It's the kind of headli
2026/01/28 huabo
Let's be honest – when most people think of fish farming, they picture a pond full of catfish or maybe some salmon pens. It's like the agricultural equivalent of planting nothing but corn and wheat.
2026/01/28 huabo
So you’re standing at the fish counter, staring at that lovely pink fillet of farmed freshwater salmon. It’s affordable, available year-round, and let’s be honest, it tastes pretty darn good. But then
2026/01/26 huabo
I remember the first time I saw an eel farm. It was a vast, muddy pond, and the whole operation felt... ancient. The water quality was questionable, the eels were stressed, and the farmer was battling
2026/01/25 huabo
Let's be honest for a second. When you hear "blue carbon," what comes to mind? Maybe a scientist in a lab coat, or a dense UN report about mangrove forests? It's easy to file it away as something
2026/01/25 huabo
Let's talk about something that sounds bureaucratic but is actually changing landscapes and bank balances: ecological compensation pilots. You've probably heard the term, maybe at a conference or bu
2026/01/25 huabo
Let’s be honest, when you hear "carbon footprint" and "aquaculture" together, your mind probably jumps straight to shrimp farms replacing mangroves or the diesel fumes from fishing boats. And you’
2026/01/25 huabo
Let's be honest, when you hear "carbon sink," your eyes might glaze over a little. It sounds like something for scientists in lab coats or policy wonks at a UN conference. But what if I told you th
2026/01/25 huabo