EUROPEAN COMMISSION

The EU's Maritime Policy Blue Book, welcomed by the European Council in December 2007, undertook to take steps towards a European Marine Observation and Data Network (EMODNET) that would improve availability of high quality data. ATLIS has been selected by the European Commission as technology partner for both the first lot (EMODNET 1) and the second lot (EMODNET 2) to build the European database. With its state-of-the-art internet technology ATLIS provides access to the EMODNET database for all European member states. Both professional users (e.g. national Hydrographic Offices) and the general public in Europe will greatly benefit from this development.

Inspire

A number of measures have already been taken at EU level - the INSPIRE Directive obliges member states to adopt measures for the sharing of data sets and services between its public authorities. These measures will enable the public authorities to gain access to the data and services, and to exchange and use it for the purposes of public tasks. The Environmental Information Directive requires them to release the data when asked, the Public Sector Information Directive facilitates the re-use of public data and the revised Data Collection Regulation has improved the availability of fisheries data. Marine data catalogues and quality procedures for measurement laboratories have been developed through successive EU research programmes.

Availability of data

In practice many of these data, collected largely by public institutions, are still fragmented, of uncertain quality and difficult to assemble into a coherent picture. ATLIS technology is built with this in mind and provides all the functionality needed to overcome these problems.

EU legislation obliging governments to grant access to marine data and allow their re-use does not automatically apply to the large pools of data held by research institutions or other bodies with no formal role in government or public administration. The property rights of much of this data are restrictive in terms of re-use or may even be unknown. Partnerships dissolve when projects end and contractual delivery obligations cease.

Setting up a European marine observation and data network

Aware of these difficulties, the Commission proposed a new European Marine Observation and Data Network (EMODNET) in its Green Paper on maritime policy. Following an overwhelmingly positive response from stakeholders to its proposal, the European Commission issued its Maritime Policy Blue Book, adopted in October 2007 and welcomed by the European Council in December 2007. Here it undertook to take steps towards EMODNET in order to improve the availability of high quality data.

Data assessment in 3D

Design principles

The basic design principles of EMODNET have been formulated by the Commission. These are:

  1. collect data once and use it many times;
  2. develop standards across disciplines as well as within them;
  3. process and validate data at different levels - structures are already developing at national level but infrastructure at sea-basin and European level is needed;
  4. provide sustainable financing at an EU level so as to extract maximum value from the efforts of individual member states;
  5. build on existing efforts where data communities have already organised themselves;
  6. develop a decision-making process for priorities that is user-driven;
  7. accompany data with statements on ownership, accuracy and precision;
  8. recognise that marine data is a public good and discourage cost-recovery pricing from public bodies.

EMODNET Internet Portal for publicly accessible hydrographic data: ATLIS technology at its best!

Proof of concept

The "proof of concept" of EMODNET is being tested through preparatory actions. Internet portals for a number of maritime basins are being set up for hydrographic, geological, biological and chemical data as well as functional habitat maps. These portals will provide access to marine data of a standard format and known quality, and will identify gaps in coverage. The projects will identify the main challenges in moving from a prototype EMODNET to an operational EMODNET.

An impact assessment assesses options for moving towards a definitive EMODNET, both in the intermediate period 2011-2013 and in the long term after 2014. At the same time efforts will begin to integrate other funding mechanisms.

Visit the EMODNET portal.

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