Problem
Cephalopods represent a major and growing global food resource, yet while demand continues to increase, wild stocks are declining under fishing pressure and environmental change. However, despite decades of effort, scalable and economically viable cephalopod aquaculture has remained beyond reach.
Current cephalopod aquaculture approaches are not commercially feasible due to the combined burden of extremely expensive feeding regimes and intensive human labor. In particular, young cephalopods eat only live prey, which is costly to obtain, exhibits high variability in nutritional quality and availability, and introduces substantial biosecurity risks through parasites and microbial contamination.
In parallel, cephalopod care remains highly labor-intensive, requiring continuous monitoring, manual feeding, and frequent intervention. Together, these constraints prevent existing systems from scaling to production-relevant sizes and prices.