Scaling the global ocean data ecosystem for a sustainable ocean future.
This challenge calls for startups and social enterprises that leverage and/or contribute to the global ocean data ecosystem and which demonstrate the applications for ocean data to boost ocean conservation and promote the sustainable blue economy.
Over 80% of the ocean is yet to be mapped, but new technologies, data-processing, sensors, and satellites could transform our knowledge of and relationship with the ocean. We need science-based and data-driven decisions for a sustainable ocean future; this requires innovations in data collecting, analysis, and communication. Connecting the world’s ocean data will allow ideas to flow freely, to help match problems to solutions and accelerate our path to sustainability.
Demand for timely and accurate ocean data of all kinds is growing. Blue economy businesses need data to reduce their emissions, for site projects, and for evaluating their impact. Countries working to meet the High-Level Panel for a Sustainable Ocean Economy’s goal for 100% Sustainable Oceans need data to support integrated ocean management and to make good decisions about the use of ocean resources.
The UN Decade of Ocean Science for Sustainable Development (UN Ocean Decade) calls for the creation of a global ocean data ecosystem which will connect businesses, organizations and government data providers. Public investments in ocean observing programmes generates data that has unlocked trillions in value for businesses across all sectors.
However, scaling the ocean data ecosystem is not only about collecting and analysing data. Data accessibility remains a challenge to developing a robust ocean data ecosystem. Data generation should therefore, when possible, align with the FAIR data principles: findable, accessible, interoperable, and reusable. “Open data” and “open science” are core enablers of the ocean data ecosystem and the UN Ocean Decade more broadly.
This UpLink challenge seeks to elevate the next wave of innovators in the ocean data ecosystem – enabling access to data that used to be impossible to obtain, transforming public data into critical products and services, or collecting and contributing novel data and analyses to our ocean knowledge.
What we are looking for?
Type: Successful submissions must be beyond the ideation or prototype phase, with a measurable track record towards impact and scale. Current UpLink Top Innovators are primarily in the pilot to growth / scale phase of their operations.
Stage: Priority is given to for-profit start-up companies or social enterprises with a sustainable funding model. Not-for-profit organizations with a clearly defined, revenue generating project may also be considered.
Scale: Innovations must demonstrate the potential and desire to scale, and have a vision for achieving long-term financial viability, impact, and sustainability.
Why Apply?
The best submissions are recognised as “Top Innovators” and invited to join the UpLink Innovation Network Programme, facilitated by Friends of Ocean Action & World Economic Forum and partners to help scale and advance their impact. It will offer:
Visibility through the World Economic Forum media and social media platforms
Access to Friends of Ocean Action, World Economic Forum and Partners events
Connection to networks, organizations, companies, and funding opportunities
Capacity and community building sessions, the programme objective is to help the Top Innovators gain visibility, attract partners and funding to scale their solution, and ultimately to accelerate their impact.
Focus Areas
Eligible solutions must fit the general scope above and fall under one (or more) of the following focus areas:
Innovations in data collection
New sensors or data gathering products that improve existing data programmes or illuminate parts of the ocean or ocean processes that are currently understudied / unknown/opaque
Commercial uses for public/open data resources
Start-ups that use public data in novel ways and demonstrate the value of making publicly funded data open and accessible
Community-level data/data designed to drive decisions
Solutions that are co-designed with end users and connect the information to decision making, including community/citizen science, participatory science, or Indigenous data collection
Advanced ocean data analytics
AI and machine-learning to improve ocean monitoring, fill data gaps, improve data interoperability and access, or address other information challenges
Submissions will be assessed against the following criteria:
Financially viable business model: Solutions need to demonstrate a sustainable business model and approach to revenue. It shows the extent to which the project has achieved financial viability and sustainable revenue streams or has a vision and plan for achieving it. A strong preference is given for those that offer investable opportunities for investors or philanthropic funders.
Governance & team: Solutions should have a legal entity attached to the project or technology, and have a diverse* leadership team with the right capacity and skill set to deliver on the project’s mission.
Traction: The extent other organizations have been willing to demo, partner with, invest in, or otherwise support this solution.
Socio-ecological considerations: Submissions should at minimum adhere to the “do no harm” principle for environmental and community impact. In addition, submissions will have considered, as applicable, the impacts of their technology or data usage on the relevant community(ies) or party(ies) affected. We expect top solutions to include community engagement and/or be led by communities themselves. In the context of this challenge, that could include providing discounted or free access to technology, data, data products, capacity-building, or analyses for frontline ocean communities.
Addressing a need or gap in the ocean data ecosystem: Solutions need to have demonstrated that their technology, methodology or output is unique, contributes to the global ocean data ecosystem and ultimately expands our understanding of the ocean.
Measurement and standards verification: Solutions should demonstrate a clear impact monitoring and evaluation framework. The metrics and indicators should be tracked transparently, relevant robust standards are referenced and applied, and/or independent credentialing and third-party verification received.
Compatibility with FAIR data principles: Implementation of FAIR data principles within a company can enable better business practices and allow for efficient and effective data sharing, both with customers and across the broader data ecosystem. We encourage submitters to describe how they are implementing FAIR principles and/or managing data licensing and sharing.
*Innovations led by women and/or Indigenous groups are strongly encouraged.
Awards:- Recognition & support
Deadline:- 13-11-2023