Citizen Into Science

Involve yachtsmen in collecting oceanographic data using a satellite box.

THE Citizen Into Science project

CONTEXT AND MAIN ISSUES

The vast expanses of the high seas are difficult to access, and human presence is only transitory, so they remain largely unknown territories to this day. The facts are simple: some 14,000 pleasure boats visit the deep-sea environment every year, compared with just a hundred or so oceanographic campaigns. On the one hand, scientific expeditions provide high-quality data, obtained using complex protocols and monitored over time; but they are few and far between. On the other hand, yachtsmen – amateur or professional – may not have the technical skills to drive such protocols, but they are far more numerous, and often more flexible in their trajectories.

GOALS

Gain a better understanding of microclimates and currents on the high seas, and raise awareness among yachting stakeholders.

METHOD

In Citizen into Science, these 2 worlds are brought together to serve one purpose: to better describe microclimates and surface oceanographic variables (currents, salinity, phytoplankton, etc.) in the vastness of the open ocean, at lower carbon cost. The project takes the form of a low-cost box, developed by French start-up OceanoVox, which will enable yachts to automatically sample the upper layers of the ocean according to protocols drawn up by IFREMER scientists. Its continuous connection to a network of nano-satellites will enable real-time scientific monitoring, while providing network access to remote areas and human communities.

The data will be freely accessible to international scientists, and will feed the databases of the Global Ocean Observing System (GOOS) to create a “digital twin” of the ocean. Disseminating the results to boat owners and the general public will help raise awareness among yachting enthusiasts and democratize ocean sciences.

HOW IS THIS PROJECT INNOVATIVE?

Citizen into Science is innovative because it brings together scientific research and yachting to collect data on the high seas at a lower carbon cost. The data will be freely accessible to international scientists to feed the GOOS databases. Disseminating the results to boat owners and the general public will raise awareness among yachting enthusiasts and democratise ocean sciences.

LOCATION

Graphic summary

Project duration

2023 – 2025

SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT GOALS

Results and advances

Coming soon

Step 1

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étape 3

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The team

Lucie Cocquempot

Research engineer - Ifremer ocean observation coordinator

Antoine Cousot

General Manager, co-founder OceanoVox

Patrick Gorringe

Director, Swedish Delegation International Ocean Affairs (UNESCO)

Martin Kramp

OceanOPS technical coordinator (IFREMER)

Partners

Institutional Partners

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