Soccer Club Strikes Back At Climate Crisis With Algae-Powered Uniform

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Spanish top-flight soccer club Real Betis Balompié has launched a new uniform made from an unexpected material ― the invasive algae, Rugulopteryx okamurae, that, due to climate change, is posing an increasing threat to the ecosystem of the Mediterranean Sea and beyond.

The Seville-based La Liga team, currently mid-table, unveiled its uniform (including recycled ocean plastics) last week in the southern Spanish coastal town of Tarifa, whose coastline has been hit by the ecological invader, according to the club.

Divers symbolically retrieved the message-sending jerseysfrom the seabed ahead of their presentation. Betis players will wear the uniform for Sunday’s clash with Real Sociedad.

“The presence of invasive algae on our coasts is destroying our ecosystem,” the club wrote on Instagram. “To confront them, the first kit made with fibers created from these algae was born.”

Real Betis foundation director Rafael Muela (center), with divers, holds up a new kit for Spanish Liga team Real Betis Balompie which is made from algae and plastics collected from the bottom of the sea.
Real Betis foundation director Rafael Muela (center), with divers, holds up a new kit for Spanish Liga team Real Betis Balompie which is made from algae and plastics collected from the bottom of the sea.
JORGE GUERRERO via Getty Images

The brown algae are native to the North Pacific Ocean and arrived off Spain’s coast circa 2015, most likely “through the ballast waters of merchant ships,” marine biologist Candela Sánchez Atienzar told the AFP news agency.

“When it arrived it started to spread out of control, there’s no invasion in the history of science described on this scale,” Sánchez recalled.

Climate change has seen algae proliferate off Spain’s coast in recent years, and there are no signs of slowing down as the Mediterranean Sea’s surface temperature soars to record highs each summer.

Spain is frequently referred to as “ground zero” of the climate crisis in Europe, with hotter summer heatwaves and devastating storms.

Removing the algae is an expensive process that now costs the southern Spanish coastal town of Estepona alone more than $1 million per year, reported El País newspaper.

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Tarifa itself, meanwhile, is seeking to turn the algae into electricity and sustainable fertilizer using an experimental bioreactor.

Estepona Town Hall cleaning staff remove the invasive algae, rugulopteryx okamurae, in July 2024.
Estepona Town Hall cleaning staff remove the invasive algae, rugulopteryx okamurae, in July 2024.
JORGE GUERRERO via Getty Images

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