To achieve ENVRI-FAIR’s high-level goals, the focus of work has been put predominantly on technical aspects. ENVRI RIs were engaged in enhancing the FAIRness of their individual data and services and promote them at a higher level by fostering FAIR practices as a collective cluster. To establish a shared foundation, critical technical gaps have been identified and prioritised. Through cross-discipline harmonisation and standardisation activities, and the implementation of joint data management and access structures at the RI level, ENVRI-FAIR facilitated strategic coordination of observation systems required for interdisciplinary science. By promoting common policies, open standards, interoperability solutions, and FAIR-based stewardship of data, ENVRI-FAIR significantly reduced development costs for individual RIs when addressing shared problems.
A few of the most important achievements are the following:
(1) The progressing implementation of FAIR-enabling resources during ENVRI-FAIR was captured by multiple updates of FAIR Implementation Profiles (FIP) implemented at the various data resources of the participating RIs. At project start, the average FIP score was 66% (min. 24%, max. 95%) of maximum reachable FAIR-enabling resources, while at the end of the project, the average FIP score was 88% (min. 57%, max. 100%). These numbers quantify the enormous success of ENVRI-FAIR for the FAIRification of the various repositories operated by the RIs.
(2) The ENVRI-Hub Demonstrator represents collaboration, accessibility, and FAIRness. It functions as a demonstration platform, a testbed, and a service validation framework, enabling participating infrastructures and their communities to benefit from enhanced collaboration, improved data accessibility, and a pathway towards achieving FAIR compliance. Through the ENVRI-Hub, the ENVRI community shares their FAIRness experience, technologies, and training as well as research products and services. The architecture and functionalities of the ENVRI-Hub are driven by scientific applications, use cases and user needs. Its three main pillars are the ENVRI Knowledge Base as the human interface to the ENVRI ecosystem, the ENVRI Catalogue of Services as the EOSC-based machine-actionable interface to the ENVRI ecosystem, and finally, subdomain and cross-domain scientific use cases as demonstrators for the capabilities of service provision among ENVRI RIs and across science clusters.
The ENVRI-Hub Demonstrator is accessible at
https://envri-hub.envri.eu/(si apre in una nuova finestra).
(3) The science demonstrators published on the ENVRI-Hub are the key products to express the ENVRI-Hub’s potential regarding easy access to metadata and services, data discovery, as well as the promotion of interoperability in science across subdomains. They also demonstrate the capabilities of service provision among ENVRI RIs and science clusters and demonstrate how joint projects can address major challenges for Europe’s societies and how research infrastructures can support Horizon Europe’s missions within EOSC. Science demonstrators are supported by Jupyter Notebooks which form the nucleus of the future ENVRI Virtual Research Environment.
(4) Our stakeholder communities were targeted by a series of tailored dissemination events: (i) regular ENVRI community sessions during the annual ENVRI weeks; (ii) EOSC Symposia and EOSC Future meetings for reaching out to EOSC key players and e-Infrastructures; (iii) European Geosciences Union General Assemblies for targeting the scientific communities of all ENVRI RIs engaged in ENVRI-FAIR and beyond; (iv) the Policy Event entitled “Open and FAIR environmental data for societal benefits” organised parallel to the Conference on ”The Potential of Research Data: How Research Infrastructures Provide New Opportunities and Benefits for Society” of the Swedish Presidency of the Council of the European Union on 19 – 20 June 2023 in Lund, Sweden, for reaching out to decision makers and the broader public.