MOD ALLIANCE SISTER PROJECTS
The MOD Alliance is a collaborative platform comprising the communication efforts of three of Horizon Europe’s sister projects.
The MOD Alliance is a collaborative platform comprising the communication efforts of three of Horizon Europe’s sister projects.
Date & time:Thursday 27th November 2025 , 12:00pm CET
Speaker: Natalya Gallo
Abstract: Dr. Natalya Gallo is a marine ecologist and biological oceanographer at the Norwegian Research Centre (NORCE), affiliated with the Bjerknes Centre for Climate Research and the University of Bergen.
Her research explores how climate change impacts deep-sea ecosystems, with a focus on blue carbon, ocean deoxygenation, and sustainable ocean management. Natalya holds a PhD from the Scripps Institution of Oceanography at UC San Diego, where she studied the effects of low-oxygen zones on deep-sea fish communities.
She has contributed to multiple Horizon Europe projects, including OceanICU and MARCO-BOLO, and is deeply engaged in the science-policy interface, having participated in several UN climate and ocean conferences.
Natalya is also active in international initiatives such as the UN Decade of Ocean Science, the Deep Ocean Stewardship Initiative, and the Global Ocean Oxygen Network.
In 2019, she gave a TEDxUCSD talk on the importance of ocean oxygen and its role in sustaining marine life, highlighting the urgent need for climate action.
Date & time: 25th September 2025, at 11 AM CET
Speaker: Lucrezia Bernacchi & Miguel Carvalho
Abstract: Marine robots represent cutting-edge technology for mapping coastal marine habitats. Equipped with a variety of onboard sensors and offering high mobility, these vehicles can collect a wide range of data while covering much larger areas than traditional survey methods. Within the DiverSea project, we employ marine robotics to carry out extensive mapping of coastal environments and to monitor marine biodiversity using a combination of autonomous vehicles, sensors, and innovative solutions.
What advantages does this technology offer over conventional approaches? What types of data can these vehicles collect? What challenges arise when deploying marine robotic systems in coastal environments? In this webinar, we will explore how marine robotics can advance our understanding of coastal ecosystems and discuss the practical challenges these vehicles face when deployed in complex marine environments
Date & time: 8th May 2025, at 11 AM CET
Speaker: Dr. Hege Gundersen and Dr. Kasper Hancke
Abstract: Flying drones offer a novel and cost-efficient technology for coastal habitat mapping. In the SeaBee infrastructure, we demonstrate that drones, when combined with sophisticated sensors and machine learning, can produce predictive maps of coastal vegetation, such as seagrass and macroalgae at centimeter-scale spatial resolution.
In the OBAMA-NEXT project, we are building on the SeaBee mapping procedures to adapt them to several learning sites across Europe and to upscale the drone-based products to regional scales using satellite data. We are also developing methods to quantify the volume of blue carbon habitats using LiDAR technology from drones.
In this presentation, we will show some of the results obtained in OBAMA-NEXT and related studies, and how these methods can benefit mapping and monitoring efforts in Europe.
Date & time: 19th February 2025, at 5 PM CET
Speaker: Dan Lear and Dr. Pier Luigi Buttigieg
Abstract: The need for open, transparent and trusted data, products, and tools has never been greater. To support policy development and ocean governance at national, regional and global levels, we need foundational data and their descriptions to be standardised, accessible and actionable by various actors, frameworks and partnerships.
In the MARCO-BOLO project, we are developing and implementing global FAIR (Findable Accessible Interoperable and Reusable) data pipelines based on technical standards and protocols that extend beyond the marine domain.
In this presentation, we explored the technology, the challenges of implementation, the broader landscape, and the goal of creating a globally interoperable ocean data ecosystem.