Healing Coral Reefs With Electricity And Rebar

The world’s coral reefs are in trouble. Not just from localised over-fishing and habitat destruction, but worldwide climate change as well. The solution — electrified artificial reefs, of course.

Birorock starts out as a Rebar skeleton structure or electrically conductive wire mesh, called a Coral Ark. It’s partially sunken or anchored into the seafloor with a solar panel floating on the surface above it, which provides a steady electrical current. As electricity (an exceptionally low voltage, completely safe for swimmers and marine life alike) flows through the structure, accretion occurs — essentially, the salt water electrolyses, causing calcium carbonate and magnesium hydroxide to form on the cathode — coating the Ark with a natural concrete material very similar to that of clam shells. As long as the current continues to flow, these structures can grow indefinitely — at a rate of 5cm annually — as precipitated materials add to the structures rigidity and will even repair themselves if damaged.

Marine animals from oysters to octopi are immediately attracted to these structures — not only for the shade and protection they offer, but also by the weak electrical fields they give off — and will often begin to colonise them within days. Divers will also transplant coral fragments from other reefs to the structure where they use the limestone accretion process to dramatically increase the rate at which their own colonies grow — like, three to five times faster. Other attached organisms like clams and oysters also experience accelerated growth. The electrolysis process also significantly increases the coral’s resistance to environmental stresses like pollution and global warming (though these benefits are lost if the power ever cuts out).

As these structures solidify on the seafloor and start to more closely resemble natural reefs, they begin to provide the same benefits of natural reefs — greater resistance to the incoming wave actions reduces the energy with which each wave hits the beach, allowing more suspended sand particles to be dropped on the beach. That slows — and in some cases, even reverses — erosion, increases the amount of particulates in the water (more plankton and Zooxanthella, which make up the base of the food chain), and in turn, attracts even more marine life in high densities.

The benefits of Coral Arks are not limited to wildlife, of course. Local fishermen are able to create sustainable harvesting schemes for the fish, lobster, and oyster stocks the Arks produce, while Ecotourism outfits benefit from the hoards of free-swimming marine life. The structures themselves — on account of their self-healing properties and the fact that they’re cheaper to produce than traditional concrete — make excellent breakwaters.

The Banyan Tree Ihuru Tourist Resort in the Maldives, for example, had a huge problem with erosion on its beaches. And by huge, I mean the entire beach was in danger of vanishing. Their initial plan to encircle the island resort in sandbags failed as waves quickly shredded them. But, when the resort owners installed Coral Arks along a 140 length of seafloor, the beach grew back. 15m in just two years. The resort is now planing to ring the island with a “necklace” of Coral Arks.

Wolf Hilbertz Wiki, Biorock Technologies, Mineral Accretion Technology for Reef Resotration, New Technology for Growing, Restoring, and Farming Coral Reefs and for Coastal Protection, Biorock Wiki, Global Coral]

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Diving Structures, April 2005, Part 2

Barnacles Encrusting a Coral Ark

a Coral Ark

How the Coral Ark works

A floating solar cell, providing power to a subsurface Coral Ark

Limestone buildup on an Ark bar

Banyan Tree Ihuru Resort’s initial erosion solution

One of the “necklace” structures at the Banyan Tree Ihuru Resort


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