Over its four-year duration, IMPROVE recruited fifteen international doctoral researchers, each supported by an extensive programme of training, mentoring, and mobility. They collectively carried out over 80 months of secondments across partner institutions and companies, ensuring close collaboration between academia and industry.
Scientific work focused on two natural laboratories. At Krafla (Iceland), teams combined seismology, geodesy, gravity, geochemistry, and modelling to image magma bodies located just a few kilometres below the surface. They discovered new patterns of stress and deformation at the rifting plate boundary and clarified how geothermal operations influence local seismicity. At Mount Etna (Italy), researchers integrated satellite, ground, and experimental data to study magma transport and surface deformation across timescales from seconds to years, filling a long-standing observational gap between seismic and geodetic measurements.
Complementing these scientific achievements, IMPROVE fostered strong industry engagement. Collaborations with Landsvirkjun (the Icelandic national power company), West Systems (instrumentation manufacturer), and other SMEs led to technological advances, including an automated gas–steam ratio sensor and applications of distributed acoustic sensing for geothermal and volcanic monitoring. Science-industry relationships were explored during one dedicated workshop which gathered representatives from the two sectors and furthe exposed the early stage researchers to multiple career perspectives.
Training was delivered through four network schools, five specialised courses, nine public digital training modules, and three ESR-led mini-workshops. These activities combined technical instruction with transferable skills in communication, entrepreneurship, and project management.
Dissemination and outreach were major components. IMPROVE maintained an active website and social media presence, published articles in science magazines, issued newsletters, and participated in European Researchers’ Nights. The project’s outcomes were widely presented at international conferences and workshops, and more than a dozen peer-reviewed papers have already been published or are under review, with many more forthcoming.
All data collected were managed through a dedicated open database following FAIR principles and integrated with the European Plate Observing System (EPOS), ensuring long-term accessibility. Together, these efforts guarantee that IMPROVE’s scientific and educational legacy will continue to grow beyond the project’s lifetime.