If you are a Port Authority dealing with unpredictable sea-level rises and storm surges — this project developed a Decision Support Platform (O-DSP) that makes climate data interoperable to protect critical infrastructure.
Climate Risk Decision Platform for Coastal Infrastructure and Maritime Planning
Imagine having a single digital dashboard that combines all the messy weather and ocean data into one clear map. It helps coastal cities and businesses see exactly how rising seas or storms might hit their specific location. Instead of guessing, they can use these tools to plan safer buildings and smarter ports.
What needed solving
Coastal businesses and authorities struggle with fragmented climate data, making it hard to predict risks to infrastructure. This leads to poor investment decisions and a lack of resilience against rising sea levels.
What was built
The OCEANIDS Decision Support Platform (O-DSP), a single-access window that harmonizes and curates climate data for maritime spatial planning.
Who needs this
Who can put this to work
If you are a Resort Developer dealing with shoreline erosion and climate vulnerability — this project developed user-driven tools that help you design local adaptation strategies based on curated climate services.
If you are a Sustainability Firm dealing with fragmented environmental data for clients — this project developed a data-exchange window that streamlines the flow of local and central climate information.
Quick answers
What is the cost or price of the O-DSP tool?
Based on available project data, no specific pricing or commercial cost for the tool is mentioned; it is developed as part of an EU-funded research project.
Can this be scaled to an industrial level?
The project is designed for industrial scale, demonstrating tools across 7 different EU regions with 12 end-users to ensure diverse coastal environments are covered.
What are the IP and licensing terms?
Based on available project data, specific licensing terms are not listed, but the goal is to make data accessible, reusable, and interoperable.
How does this integrate with existing systems?
The project creates a single-access window platform that harmonizes existing climate data services and integrates them into operational EU infrastructure.
What is the timeline for deployment?
The project period runs from 2023-12-01 to 2026-07-31, indicating the tools will be refined and demonstrated through mid-2026.
Who built it
The consortium is heavily weighted toward practical application, with 12 industry partners (44% ratio) and 9 SMEs. This strong industrial presence, combined with 10 other organizations and 5 research/university entities across 11 countries, suggests the output is designed for commercial utility rather than purely academic study.
Contact GEOSYSTEMS HELLAS IT KAI EFARMOGESGEOPLIROFORIAKON SYSTIMATON ANONIMIETAIREIA in Greece
Talk to the team behind this work.
Contact us to connect with the O-DSP development team for early access.