
Tidal Vision
Tidal Vision is a technology company.

Tidal Vision is a technology company.
Tidal Vision is a green chemistry company that manufactures chitosan—a non-toxic, biodegradable biopolymer extracted from discarded crab shells—into scalable biomolecular solutions for water treatment, agriculture, and material science.[1][2][3][6] It serves critical industries by providing high-performance, zero-waste products like Tidal-Tec® for materials, Tidal Grow® for agriscience, and Chitofining® for water purification, solving problems such as pollution, chemical instability, and synthetic alternatives' environmental harm.[1][5][6] The company demonstrates strong growth momentum, with a recent $140M Series B funding round (completed in 2025) to expand production in Texas, Ohio, and Europe, grow its headcount to 287 employees, and accelerate R&D, building on acquisitions like Clear Water Services and new facilities in South Carolina.[1][3]
Tidal Vision was co-founded by Craig Kasberg, a former Alaska fishing boat captain, who recognized the potential in transforming abundant crab shell waste from the seafood industry into valuable chitosan.[3] The idea emerged from Kasberg's firsthand experience with discarded shells, leading to a zero-waste extraction process that produces consistent, low-cost chitosan optimized for industrial use—the only commercial-scale US-based operation of its kind.[2][3] Early traction came through market-proven applications and partnerships, evolving into global expansion; pivotal moments include the 2023 acquisition of Clear Water Services (an early customer) and breaking ground on a Texas fertilizer plant in July 2025, culminating in the $140M Series B led by Cambridge Companies SPG.[1][3]
Tidal Vision rides the circular economy and green chemistry wave, capitalizing on rising demand for sustainable biomaterials amid volatile synthetic chemical prices, stricter regulations, and climate pressures.[1][5] Timing is ideal post-2025 funding, aligning with global pushes for zero-waste processes in water scarcity, food security, and material innovation—crab shells provide a massive, renewable feedstock from seafood waste.[2][3][6] Market forces like Eni Next and Oman Investment Authority's backing amplify its influence, positioning it as the global chitosan leader to disrupt trillion-dollar sectors, fostering ecosystem-wide shifts toward biobased alternatives.[1][3]
Tidal Vision is primed to dominate biomolecular solutions, leveraging $140M to operationalize new plants and R&D for chitosan breakthroughs and adjacent tech.[1][3] Trends like regulatory tailwinds for eco-materials, agtech precision farming, and circular supply chains will propel growth, potentially expanding into encapsulation, membranes, and more.[5][6] Its influence may evolve from niche innovator to systemic enabler, outcompeting legacy chemicals globally and redefining waste as a resource—inviting industry leaders to scale positive environmental impact.[1]