From ICEBERG to BlueMission: scaling insights across the Atlantic Arctic
The bridge between ICEBERG and BlueMissionAA is both conceptual and operational. Conceptually, ICEBERG generates exactly the type of integrated evidence, risk assessment and governance innovation that the Mission needs to underpin restoration and resilience in the Arctic and its connected Atlantic domains. Operationally, the AIR Centre’s dual role—contributing to ICEBERG on risk assessment, marine litter mapping and local resilience strategies, while coordinating BlueMissionAA—creates a direct pathway for knowledge, tools and policy recommendations to flow from a single project into the wider Atlantic–Arctic Lighthouse community. In ICEBERG, for instance, automated marine litter density mapping and co-developed resilience strategies are explicitly framed as contributions to more effective marine restoration tools and Mission-aligned governance in the Arctic–Atlantic basin, with policy outputs channelled via BlueMissionAA.
This linkage has several practical implications for Mission implementation. First, it ensures that Mission actions in the Atlantic & Arctic Lighthouse are informed by detailed, context-specific understanding of pollution pathways and climate interactions in sensitive Arctic regions, rather than by generic assumptions. Second, it demonstrates a working model of vertical integration: community-level engagement and Indigenous perspectives feed into EU-level strategies through a structured hub, helping to make Mission governance more inclusive and legitimate. Third, by embedding ICEBERG’s results in the BlueMissionAA innovation ecosystem and monitoring framework, there is a clear route for upscaling successful tools and approaches—such as pollution-control governance models or citizen-engagement methods—across other Arctic and Atlantic coastal communities.
In that sense, ICEBERG can be seen as one of the Arctic “engines” of the broader Mission Restore our Ocean and Waters. It pilots integrated One Health assessments, tests new forms of community engagement and delivers actionable recommendations for pollution-control governance, while BlueMissionAA provides the architecture to circulate, amplify and mainstream those lessons across the Atlantic–Arctic Lighthouse. Together, they show how Horizon Europe can connect a single project’s detailed work with communities in Svalbard, Greenland or Iceland to a basin-scale, mission-driven effort to restore ocean and coastal health by 2030.
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