SELIS (2016–2019) aimed to build a shared European logistics information space, placing Exmile within the data architecture or platform integration workstream.
EXMILE SOLUTIONS LIMITED
UK technology SME with EU project experience in logistics data platforms and maritime big data analytics.
Their core work
Exmile Solutions is a London-based technology SME specialising in data platforms and information systems for transport and maritime industries. Their H2020 work places them in two distinct but related domains: logistics data interoperability (SELIS) and big data analytics for maritime applications (BigDataOcean). Both projects suggest the company contributes software, data integration, or analytics capabilities rather than hardware or infrastructure. As a small private company participating in large multi-country consortia, they likely fill a specialist role — delivering a specific technical component or service rather than leading programme direction.
What they specialise in
BigDataOcean (2017–2019) focused on exploiting large-scale ocean and maritime datasets, indicating data engineering or application-layer expertise in the maritime domain.
Participation in both a logistics information system and a maritime data platform signals a recurring capability in connecting heterogeneous data sources across transport sub-sectors.
How they've shifted over time
Both H2020 projects ran concurrently between 2016 and 2019, making it impossible to identify a meaningful before/after shift — Exmile's entire recorded EU research activity is compressed into a single three-year window. Within that window, their focus moved from land-side logistics data (SELIS) toward ocean and maritime data analytics (BigDataOcean), suggesting a broadening of domain from supply chain to maritime transport. No keyword data is available to confirm or refine this reading, so this evolution should be treated as tentative.
With no H2020 projects recorded after 2019, it is unclear whether Exmile continued EU research activity under Horizon Europe — a potential collaborator should verify current engagement before assuming ongoing R&D focus.
How they like to work
Exmile has never acted as a coordinator; in both projects they joined as a participating partner within large multi-country consortia. Fifty unique partners across 14 countries from just two projects indicates they operate inside very large consortium structures typical of ICT and transport RIA/IA calls. This profile suggests they are comfortable as a specialist contributor — delivering a bounded technical scope — rather than driving consortium strategy or managing other partners.
Exmile has worked with 50 distinct consortium partners across 14 countries, a notably broad network for an organisation with only two recorded projects. Their connections span EU transport and digital research communities, likely including universities, port authorities, logistics operators, and ICT firms.
What sets them apart
Exmile occupies an unusual niche as a small private company with hands-on experience in both land logistics data infrastructure and maritime big data — two domains that rarely overlap in SME portfolios. For consortium builders needing a lean, specialist technology partner who understands both supply chain and maritime data contexts, Exmile offers direct project experience without the overhead of a large firm. However, with no public website on record and no activity beyond 2019, any prospective partner should first confirm the company is still active before engaging.
Highlights from their portfolio
- BigDataOceanThe largest of the two projects by EC contribution (EUR 408,188) and the more technically ambitious, targeting exploitation of large-scale maritime datasets — a high-growth area intersecting IoT, AI, and port logistics.
- SELISAddressed pan-European logistics data interoperability, a strategically important infrastructure challenge that directly supports the EU Single Transport Area policy agenda.