What the EU is doing
The ocean covers 70% of Earth, yet we have explored and mapped just 5%. OceanEye is the EU’s plan to change that, by leading global ocean observation by 2035.
One of the key priorities of the European Ocean Pact is to advance ocean research, knowledge, skills and innovation. OceanEye is an essential part of this effort.
OceanEye: An EU ocean observation initiative - COM/2026/268
Press release: Commission presents OceanEye initiative to put EU at the forefront of ocean observation
Factsheet: OceanEye: Ocean Observation at a glance
Factsheet: OceanEye: Making the EU the leader in ocean observation

What OceanEye aims to achieve by 2035
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
How will OceanEye help businesses and innovation?
- €30 million for startups developing ocean tech (e.g., underwater drones, AI sensors)
- public-private partnerships to turn research into market-ready products
- training programmes to create jobs in marine tech, data science, and engineering
Goal: Make Europe the global leader in ocean tech - boosting jobs and economic growth.

How will the public be involved?
Ocean Observation Week (2027)
Schools and students will will explore marine science with EU4Ocean and European Blue Schools
New European Bauhaus Lab
Artists and designers will turn ocean data into public exhibitions, museums, and installations
EU4Ocean Coalition
Mentoring and internships for young people in ocean careers

Areas of action
The International Alliance for Global Ocean Observing System supports OceanEye
EU’s strategy to safeguard our ocean and boost sustainable maritime industries
Platform sharing real-time ocean data, past trends, and future forecasts in one place
This page was last reviewed on 3 June 2026
