The Arctic Ocean remains one of the least explored regions on Earth, with limited data from beneath the sea ice and the seafloor. This lack of in situ observations restricts scientific understanding of climate, ocean-ice interactions, and geophysical hazards. To address this, the HiAOOS project is developing and testing new technologies to improve data collection in the ice-covered Arctic.
A network of multipurpose moorings will be deployed in the Nansen and Amundsen Basins for two years. These moorings will collect ocean and sea ice data, as well as acoustic signals for applications such as underwater positioning, acoustic thermometry, and monitoring of marine life and geohazards. The system builds on previous Arctic experiments and introduces innovations like ROV- and winch-based data retrieval.
HiAOOS is also developing ice buoys with acoustic arrays for testing underwater navigation and event localization. New digital tools and machine learning methods will support data analysis and be made available through the Blue Insight platform and Zenodo. Training and use cases will help research infrastructures and developers adopt these tools. Data products will follow FAIR principles and be shared via open-access platforms. Field experiments will run annually from 2024 to 2026, with environmental assessments conducted before each campaign.
The overall objective of HiAOOS is:
Advance the uptake of new ocean observing capabilities and capacity in the high Arctic to strengthen European and national infrastructures in their effort to support new and ambitions research within climate, environment and geohazards. Specific objectives:
Specific objectives are:
SO1: Establish collaboration with existing and emerging research infrastructures in the Arctic
SO2: Improve the observing capabilities in ice-covered Arctic Ocean through new infrastructure
SO3: Unlock new observing capacity to Ris and researchers through methods, tools and training
SO4: Advance observing systems in the Arctic building on subsea technology
SO5: Reduce environmental impact of Arctic observing systems
SO6: Comply with the FAIR principles and contribute to Open Science.