Offshore Freshened Groundwater (OFG) is a potentially strategic resource for coastal water security. Despite its discovery in the 1960s and estimates of substantial global volumes, OFG remains poorly understood. Existing data are sparse and largely incidental, originating from offshore hydrocarbon drilling. Research efforts so far have lacked coordinated approaches to assess OFG’s potential for sustainable use.
Advancing the understanding of OFG systems requires research into their emplacement history and age, as well as recharge and discharge mechanisms. Investigations into permeability, porosity, and fluid flow pathways will improve predictions of OFG behaviour under natural conditions and potential utilisation scenarios. Fluid flow processes, hydraulic properties, and connectivity between onshore and offshore aquifers must be studied to assess long-term viability and estimate the sustainable yield of an OFG reservoir. Understanding recharge processes under current conditions should be a prerequisite before any large-scale exploitation, as abstraction could significantly impact the freshwater-saltwater interface.
The primary objective of this Joint Call is to act as a “proof of concept” through the launch of a pioneering scientific drilling campaign that integrates hydrogeological and geochemical characterisation, with pumping tests, to validate OFG systems and generate critical data on their distribution, properties, recharge mechanisms, and long-term viability as a resource.
This initiative aims to lay the groundwork for the potential future strategic use and sustainable management of OFG resources. The campaign will target knowledge gaps, including:
- Data scarcity and inconsistency: generating systematic and comprehensive data on OFG properties and dynamics.
- Environmental, technological, and economic feasibility: assessing the environmental impacts and evaluating the technological and economic viability of potential OFG utilisation, while generating evidence-based input to inform resource governance frameworks/to guide policy and governance development.
- Legal and governance frameworks: informing and potentially contributing to the development of guidelines and regulatory frameworks for the integration of OFG exploration and exploitation into existing legal regimes.
The following themes are identified as priorities for the Joint Call:
- Characterisation, validation, and assessment of offshore freshened groundwater bodies, through a drilling campaign. Scientific questions originated from knowledge gaps:
- Functioning of OFG systems and onshore-offshore connectivity
- Age of emplacement of the OFG
- Hydraulic and hydrogeologic properties
- Potential environmental impacts emerging from use of OFG
- Environmental assessment of offshore freshened groundwater seeps (developing environmental baselines)
- Seep characterisation (functioning of seepage)
- Seep-related ecosystems characterisation (bio-geochemical aspects)
- Monitoring
The geographical spread of the proposed research should include the North Adriatic Sea (preferentially in the offshore of the Friuli Venezia Giulia region) but is not limited to it and may also cover other European Marine basins, such as the Mediterranean Sea, the North Sea, and the Baltic Sea.
- Launch of the Call: 4 December 2025
- Deadline for submitting applications: 6 March 2026, 17:00 CET
- End of peer review process: April 2026
- Informing projects of results: May 2026
- Start of projects: within six months after the selection process and no later than 15 December 2026
Funding partners from Malta, Italy, Germany and Greece (in-kind) make available a total of € 2,000,000 for the Joint Call. Each participant in a consortium will be funded by their national partner organisation.
- Xjenza Malta, Malta with € 300,000
- Ministry of Universities and Research, Italy with € 300,000
- Autonomous Region of Friuli Venezia Giulia, Italy with € 500,000
- Federal Ministry of Research, Technology and Space, Germany with € 900,000
- The Hellenic Centre for Marine Research, Greece with in-kind contributions
All proposals must be submitted electronically by the project coordinator using the online platform: Submission platform.
The maximum length of proposals is 30 pages and applications must be submitted in English, using the official application form for this call.
The call seeks to fund one single integrated project (involving a drilling campaign) that demonstrates efficient collaboration and use of available resources across participating FUNDING PARTNERS.
Each application should involve eligible project partners requesting funding from all respective funding partners (cash contributions) of this Joint Call.
The eligibility criteria specified by the respective funding partners must be met. For details, potential applicants must consult the national and regional funding rules for their respective funding partners participating in the Call (see Call text, Annex 1). Questions on the national requirements should be addressed to the relevant National Contact Points (also in Annex 1) before applying.
This Joint Action is co-branded with the United Nations Decade of Ocean Science for Sustainable Development.
