On 19 February, the Iceland Ocean Cluster hosted the Copernicus Marine User Forum Iceland, bringing together researchers, companies, and ocean professionals for an afternoon focused on what free, open, satellite-derived ocean data can do for Iceland.

Marco Pizzolato from the Icelandic Institute of Natural History set the scene: a continuous, four-dimensional picture of the world’s oceans going back to 1993, freely accessible to anyone. What followed showed what Icelandic organisations are already doing with it.

Hefring Marine demonstrated how vessel sensor data combined with real-time sea conditions can automatically detect safety incidents before the crew has fully reacted.

Greenfish showed fish location forecasting models recalibrating every six hours, giving captains an eight-day picture of where the fish will be.

The Marine and Freshwater Research Institute and the University of Iceland presented applications ranging from aquaculture modelling to coastal change monitoring and sea ice tracking.

Angel Ruiz-Angulo closed the scientific programme by drawing a direct line between what an oceanographer observes from a research vessel and what thirty years of satellite data now makes measurable at scale. Phytoplankton blooms around Iceland are shifting in ways that challenge established understanding. From a vessel you sense it. In the data you can prove it.

The next step is the Blue North marine hackathon, where teams will tackle real Icelandic ocean challenges using Copernicus data. More details coming soon.

Blue North is funded by the Copernicus Marine National Collaboration Programme managed by Mercator Ocean International on behalf of the European Commission, and delivered in partnership by the University of Iceland, the Iceland Ocean Cluster, and the Icelandic Institute of Natural History.