ocean practices for the decade

“Developing global consensus on how methods should interoperate and evolve into best practices is a major challenge on the path to realizing the Ocean Decade’s ambitions.”

The Ocean Practices for the Decade Programme (OceanPractices) supports all ocean stakeholders in securing, equitably sharing, and collectively advancing your methodological heritage. By engaging diverse communities of practice, OceanPractices can transform how science and other stakeholders align their interests/capacities, creating and using practices to promote sustainable human and ocean well-being.  

Objectives

The Ocean Practices created a framework of high-level objectives to guide programme actions and define and monitor outcomes. These objectives are:

Activities

OceanPractices will be implemented through the following activities. Over the Decade, these Activities will be updated in response to changing needs.

Current Activities:


OceanPractices Federated Network: OBPS is not the only aquatic and ocean sciences Methodology Management System (MMS).  The establishment of the OceanPractices Federated Network will facilitate a coordinated approach across MMS from individual institutions or enterprises. This will enable MMS that may be siloed and often inaccessible, to interoperate and offer federated searching. Read more  here


OceanPractices Community of Practice: This COP is available to all members of other Decade Actions who have an interest to adopt or create and share superior methods for every activity in the ocean information value chain, from research to operations to applications. Read more  here .

Outcomes

The outcomes currently envisioned are:

  1. A participatory ocean where all ocean stakeholders can discover, understand, and co-develop the next generation of ocean practices with increased equity, accelerating inclusive capacity exchange and development
  2. An oceanwide community of practice where local, regional, and global stores of evolving ocean knowhow and methodology are collectively safeguarded as a shared resource and trust for current and future generations to draw from in the creation of new practices for opportunities and threats we have yet to imagine.
  3. A new commons of practitioner wisdom through which diverse experience across ocean stakeholders are readily available to guide the selection and endorsement of practices for use across regions, operational realities, and value systems of ocean communities in their support of science and sustainable development converge innovative methodologies into endorsement of methods
  4. An ocean of holistic methods where technologies and new, open paradigms of methodology development and communication bring disciplines together in support of holistic methods, realizing transparency and advanced interoperability across disciplines and stakeholders
  5. A future-facing federation of digitized knowhow for technology transfer and capacity development which equips all partners with interoperating digital archives of ocean practice, creating a global network to support the integration of methodologies into the digital ocean ecosystem.

Decade Projects and Actions hosted by OceanPractices

Advocating for humane capture fisheries to support
ocean and fisheries sustainability

Region: Global, Lead Institute: Aquatic Life Institute

Every year, 2-3 trillion individual aquatic animals are caught in the wild and killed for human consumption. Yet, animal welfare for aquatic animals lags far behind that of farmed land animals. Our Fisheries Welfare Project at Aquatic Life Institute aims to incorporate aquatic animal welfare considerations at legislative, corporate policy and industry standard levels. Commendable efforts are already being made to steer towards more humane capture fisheries. We work closely with policy-makers, seafood certifiers and businesses along the seafood supply chain to advocate for the widespread adoption of these progressive practices

Advancing National Best Practices for Marine Monitoring

Region: Australia, Lead Institute: NESP Marine and Coastal Hub

This project aims to advance the establishment and use of national practices to monitor the condition status of priority values and pressures of Australia’s marine estate. We will achieve this by building on a previous project to produce three new national standards for monitoring (drop cameras, socioeconomic surveys of marine users. marine microplastics). We will also develop a practical implementation plan to embed the application of standards, with particular attention to inclusive and diverse approaches (e.g., engagement of community groups and Indigenous partnerships). The plan will set out a future path to develop, maintain and make available national standards; increase their uptake; and assess effectiveness and impact as related to the delivery of priority marine monitoring activities. The resulting national framework will be of use to other countries and regions seeking to develop and maintain their own ocean best practices to ensure a sustainable marine estate.


Ocean Community: Engaging through the use of best practices

Region: Global, Lead Institute: IFREMER

Global and regional perspectives of the ocean are essential in addressing climate and sustainability. To understand a global ocean. similar and interoperable methods are needed for in situ and remote sensing observations. data management. analyses as well as creation of products and services. To use similar methods in regions with different levels of infrastructure. methods must be adapted to local and regional capabilities. yet remain interoperable and transparent. The project addresses this challenge through active participation of experts. early career scientists. and indigenous knowledge holders in many global regions. This work will leverage the initial pilot in the OBPS Task Team 22:01 “Coastal observation for Under-Resourced Countries” and will be enriched by partners in LDC and SIDS. The efforts address all aspects of the ocean community incl. citizen science in support of broader ocean science. options for lower cost quality instrumentation will also be examined

Cross sector collaboration grows circular economy

Region: Australia, Fisheries Research and Development Corporation (FRDC)

Australia has a waste problem, with the highest per capita material footprint in the world, the third lowest rate of manufacturing self-sufficiency in the OECD and a circular economy that is half the global average. Circular economy is an economic model that aims to retain the value of circulating resources, products, parts and materials through a system that allows for renewability, long life, optimal (re)use, refurbishment, remanufacturing, recycling and biodegradation. Circularity is based on three integrated principles: designing out waste and pollution; keeping products and materials in use; and regenerating natural systems. The FRDC Circular Economy project uses cross-sector, cross-industry and transnational initiatives to identify circular opportunities, develop stakeholders’ circular capacity and capability; and showcase success stories that together will increase adoption of circularity throughout Australian fishing and aquaculture and improve ocean outcomes.

Innovative solutions for plastic free EU rivers (INSPIRE)

Region: Europe, Lead Institute: Flanders Marine Institute (VLIZ)

INSPIRE brings different technlogies and solutions together focusing on the detection, collection and prevention of litter, plastics and macroplastics in rivers and on riverbanks:

1. Detection of the pollution characteristics, such as type and level of pollution present in terms of litter, macro-, meso- and microplastics, floating, in the water column and at the riverbanks.
2. Collection of litter, macro and microplastics and macroplastics at the riverbank and in the river. The lifetime of litter present in the river is minimized, reducing the risk of further breakdown of items into fragments and further into microlitter and prevent them from being finally discharged to the seas and ocean.
3. Prevention of litter, macro and microplastics to enter the river by collecting it from its waste stream before it can enter the river and by developing biodegradable alternatives for currently non-degradable polluting products, to avoid they will further be used and arrive in the river as litter.

Surfside Science

Region: Netherlands, ​Metabolic Foundation

Surfside Science is an initiative to co-develop and validate low cost and replicable methods for coastal environmental monitoring on SIDS, making use of remote sensing and low-cost electronics. The goal is to identify which methods can contribute to improving access to data collection systems on small islands, with all methods and findings documented and shared openly. The approach focuses initially on Surfside Bay in Aruba as a case study, and includes development and testing of field monitoring stations, protocols, and remote sensing tools that can be expanded across the island and replicated on other islands. The initial set of parameters to be tested includes to following areas of environmental monitoring: • Air Quality: Particulate matter, humidity and temperature • Water Quality: pH, dissolved oxygen, temperature, and electrical conductivity • Coastal Change: Vegetative cover, coastline, size of reef islands • Seafloor Mapping: Seafloor cover, including shallow reef and aquatic vegetation Instructions for every step of the process are written up and shared for others to replicate, including protocols for processing of underwater imagery, construction of monitoring stations, adaptation of scripts for satellite imagery analysis, building of localized databases, connecting to our data portal, and further validation.

Streategic Management of Ghost Gear in Coastal Land

Region: North Atlantic Ocean, North Pacific Ocean, 
Lead Institute: ​Ocean Legacy Foundation – Canada

The project aims to unite efforts in developing comprehensive solutions for the collection, processing, and responsible disposal of marine-retrieved-plastics. The creation of Ocean Plastic Depots serves to expand existing networks, enhance infrastructure, and provide training to coastal communities.

Central to the project are collection programs designed to retrieve abandoned, lost, or discarded fishing gear (ALDFG) from shorelines, oceans, and marine industrial areas. An industrial-scaled hub will be established for the collection, processing, and distribution of ALDFG materials in collaboration with coastal communities. This includes supporting community partners engaged in ghost gear retrieval and creating a sustainable methodology for long-term stewardship, involving transportation and recycling programs for financial sustainability 

EPIC Academy: Plastic Pollution Education

Region: Global, Lead Institute: Ocean Legacy Foundation – Canada

The EPIC Academy presents an opportunity for students to acquire practical knowledge and a profound understanding of prevalent ocean plastic issues.

Through a thoughtfully structured curriculum, participants not only explore available solutions and innovations but also gain insights to instigate positive change to mitigate plastic pollution. Demonstrating their achievements, each lesson concludes with a quiz, and upon successfully completing all ten lessons, participants receive a prestigious digital Certificate of Completion. This certificate serves not only as a recognition of their dedication and knowledge but also as a tangible symbol to inspire and motivate others to engage in the vital cause of ocean conservation. With an ambitious goal, the EPIC Academy aspires to educate one million individuals on its curriculum by the year 2027, contributing significantly to the dissemination of critical knowledge and fostering a global community committed to combating ocean plastic pollution.

Webiste: https://edu.oceanlegacy.ca/

The Internet of Oceans (Oceaneers)

Region: Global, Lead Institute: ​MMersive Technology, Inc. – United States of America (USA)

Our Decade programme fosters synergy with existing endorsed Decade programmes by leveraging shared research platforms, aligning with recognized best practices, and complementing ongoing capacity-building efforts.

By integrating AI-driven insights and gamified advocacy tools, we accelerate innovation in ocean stewardship while uniting diverse stakeholders under a common vision. This cohesive approach ensures each programme’s strengths are amplified, creating deeper collaboration, greater data accessibility, and broader engagement—ultimately leading to a more impactful, inclusive, and agile Decade of transformative ocean action.

Blue Tourism Initiative

Regions: ​the Mediterranean, the Western Indian Ocean and the Caribbean Sea, Lead Institute: ​​Eco-union - Spain

This Blue Tourism Initiative promotes a holistic vision of maritime and coastal management in line with worldwide efforts to deliver the 2030 Agenda around marine regions. It supports exchanges of knowledge, good practices, projects and experiences between three major marine regions sharing similar environmental and social challenges related to coastal and maritime tourism: the Mediterranean, the Western Indian Ocean and the Caribbean Sea. This initiative aims to improve the governance of coastal and marine tourism to ensure sustainable, inclusive and resilient development, and address the associated environmental, health, socio-cultural and economic challenges.The Blue Tourism Initiative is co-led by the Institute for Sustainable Development and International Relations (IDDRI) and the Spanish Think and Do Tank eco-union. The three partners responsible for the project’s activities in each region are: The Centre for Mediterranean Cooperation of the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN Med) in the Mediterranean; Coastal Oceans Research and Development in the Indian Ocean (CORDIO East Africa) in the Western Indian Ocean; and the Caribbean Natural Resources Institute (CANARI) in the Caribbean.The Initiative is co-funded by the French Facility for Global Environment (FFEM), and implemented with the support of Our Blue Future (GIZ), and the UNEP Environmental Programme.

ShaRED Sea, towards a plastic-free Red Sea

Region: ​the Red Sea, Institute: ​​​EcoPeace Middle East – Israel, Jordan, Palestine

The project takes place in the northern region of the Red Sea, the Gulf of Aqaba-Eilat, where various pollutants, including plastic, pose a threat to this unique ecosystem. It aims to address this challenge by identifying and implementing best practices through community-based projects initiated by youth, young professionals, and teachers—who undergo national and regional training—while simultaneously enhancing regulation through advocacy and encouraging regional cooperation. The program focuses on fostering collaboration among participants, partners, and stakeholders in Eilat and Aqaba. Activities are guided by the latest environmental research, regional standards, and successful methodologies from similar initiatives worldwide.

Contacts

Co-Coordinators:
      Dr Rebecca Zitoun, Integrated Marine Observing System (IMOS), Hobart, Tasmania, Australia
      Prof. Aileen Hwai Tan, Universiti Sains, Malaysia
decade@oceanbestpractices.org