
Last November at COP30, 17 nations — led by France and Brazil — united around the Blue NDC Challenge, which calls for including ocean-based solutions in national climate action plans. The challenge launched earlier that year during the third UN Ocean Conference in Nice, France.
By making these commitments part of their Nationally Determined Contributions (NDCs), countries are coupling urgent ocean protection goals with climate action so that both are stronger, together.
Climate and ocean policy are becoming more connected — for good reason. Climate progress depends on what happens in and around the ocean. As the UNFCCC puts it, “The ocean is humanity’s most powerful ally in the fight against climate change.” From regulating the climate system to supporting food security and trade, the ocean is deeply intertwined with both climate risks and solutions.
Ocean action has historically received <1% of global climate finance, despite estimates that ocean-based solutions could deliver up to 35% of needed emissions cuts. Mitigation still makes up only 12% of commitments, and marine protection efforts continue to lag behind pledges.
Blue NDC efforts aim to close the “ocean opportunity gap” with a few specific tactics. These include establishing a Blue NDC Taskforce to spread awareness that ocean resilience has co-benefits for humans and nature alike, from reducing emissions to fostering coastal economies development. The Taskforce would mobilise political leadership, unlock finance, and expand technical support to governments implementing ocean commitments.
Blue NDC proponents at COP30 also introduced the Blue Package, an initial roadmap built around achieving the five Ocean Breakthroughs by 2030: protecting and restoring at least 30% of the ocean; building resilient aquatic food systems for 3 billion people; delivering 380 GW of offshore renewable energy capacity; decarbonising shipping while reducing impacts on marine biodiversity; and halving emissions from coastal tourism while building resilience in vulnerable destinations.
The 2025 NDC updates suggest broader momentum for coordinated ocean-climate action — at least 61 of 66 include at least some ocean measures.
Making Blue NDCs an effective reality starts with the right data and analytics strategy. The world needs to understand what's really happening across 1) shipping lanes (climate/emissions data) and 2) coastal waters (ocean protection data).
1. Shipping emissions data to put the climate in climate+ocean action
Ocean shipping moves over 80% of the world’s goods, leaving behind a heavy carbon wake — to the tune of ~1B tonnes of annual emissions. And that number is on track to double by 2050.
Tracking emissions is essential to reducing them, in collaboration with carriers, shippers, port cities, flag states, and other stakeholders. Historically, reliable emissions data was hard to come by. Not anymore.
As a founding member and the shipping sector lead of nonprofit coalition Climate TRACE, OceanMind is helping power timely, open, and granular emissions data for domestic and international shipping. Every month, the coalition releases updated data on emissions sources for every sector on earth, including shipping (via transportation). In this database, emissions are split and assigned to origin and destination ports.
(Note: We can also parse the data in many other useful ways, including by shipping route; ocean activity hotspots; MPA; cruise line, shipping carrier, or other company delineation; and more. Contact us to learn more.)
Concrete examples of what this kind of visibility helps make possible include:
2. Marine activity data to put the ocean in climate+ocean action
Protecting 30% of the ocean — one of the core Ocean Breakthroughs — means knowing what's happening in those waters. With ~3.3 million motorised fishing vessels and nearly 17,000 MPAs spread across vast waters, enforcement authorities have long been challenged by a lack of visibility into where to target activity.
Now, satellite imagery, remote sensing, AI, and data science are enabling stakeholders to sharpen oversight in pursuit of a range of strategies, including:
France, Brazil, and a coalition of other nations are leading the call for ocean-climate solutions. This call requires decisive follow-through if the world is to keep the climate crisis at bay, by giving the ocean a fighting chance to be the hero.
The tools exist, and the path forward is becoming clear: emissions tracked port to port, protected waters monitored in near-real time, and seafood supply chains verified from catch to plate. That's the promise of Blue NDCs delivered — oceans healthy enough to keep doing what they've always done, stabilising the climate for everyone who depends on it.
OceanMind has spent years pairing satellite and AI-powered monitoring with deep maritime enforcement expertise — work enforcement authorities and coalitions like Climate TRACE now rely on around the world — to build the solutions this moment demands.
The ocean opportunity gap won't close itself. It’s time to put these solutions to work everywhere they’re needed — together.
Interested in how OceanMind can support your Blue NDC commitments? Get in touch with our team.