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Oceans and fisheries

OceanEye: EU ocean observation initiative

What the EU is doing

What OceanEye aims to achieve by 2035

1 Position the EU as the world’s leading provider of ocean intelligence
35% EU will provide over a third of the world’s ocean data
35% EU will secure the ocean tech market
The EU will lead in cutting-edge technologies like AI, autonomous sensors, and digital twins.

Why is ocean observation important?

The more information we have about the ocean, the better we can protect it. Data from ocean observation is essential for 

  • safety and security of operations at sea
  • a competitive blue economy
  • accurate weather forecasts
  • reliable climate projections
  • ocean restoration and protection
  • stronger resilience of coastal areas

How will OceanEye work?

  • better EU governance - improve the way we collect, share and use ocean data in the EU
  • global leadership - launch an international alliance to support the Global Ocean Observing System (GOOS)
  • develop innovative markets and sectors related to ocean observation, using tools like the European Digital Twin Ocean
  • connect people to the ocean through education, culture and skills
    (like the New European Bauhaus Ocean, Coastal and Island Communities Lab)

What is the European Digital Twin Ocean?

A virtual, real-time model of the ocean that

  • combines real-time data (e.g., temperature, currents, pollution)
  • uses AI and supercomputers to predict changes (e.g., storms, marine heatwaves)
  • helps policymakers, scientists, and businesses make smarter decisions
  • will be free to use by 2030

How will OceanEye help businesses and innovation?

How will the public be involved?

How will OceanEye be funded?

  • EU funding

    Existing programmes like Horizon Europe and European Innovation Council will allocate €92 million+ (€50m for global monitoring, €12m for data systems, €30m for startups).

  • EU countries and partners

    The EU calls on countries, philanthropies, and private companies to invest in long-term ocean observation, with increased support for GOOS (Global Ocean observing System)

This page was last reviewed on 3 June 2026