FY 2025 Advancing ocean monitoring and knowledge for societal benefit: The urgency to expand Argo to OneArgo by 2030 Thierry, V., H. Claustre, O. Pasqueron de Frommervault, N. Zilberman, K.S. Johnson, B.A. King, S.E. Wijffels, U. Bhaskar, M. Alonso Balmaseda, M. Belbeoch, M. Bollard, J. Boutin, P,. Boyd, R. Cancouet, F. Chai, S. Ciavatta, R. Crane, G. Dall’Olmo, D. Desbruyères, P.J. Durack, A.J. Fassbender, K. Fennel, A. González-Santana, C. Gourcuff, A. Gray, H. Hewitt, Y. Fujii, S.R. Jayne, G.C. Johnson, N. Kolodziejczyk, A. Le Boyer, P.-Y. Le Traon, W. Llovel, S. Lozier, J.M. Lyman, E. MacDonagh, A. Martin, K.S. Mogensen, T. Morris, P. Oke, W.O. Smith, Jr., B. Owens, N. Poffa, D. Roemmich, R.R. Rykaczewski, S. Sathyendranath, M. Scanderbeg, C. Scheurle, O. Schoefield, K. von Schuckman, J. Scourse, J. Sprintall, T. Suga, M. Tonani, H. Zuo, and X. Xing Front. Mar. Sci., 12, 1593904, doi: 10.3389/fmars.2025.1593904, View open access article at Frontiers (external link) (2025) The ocean plays an essential role in regulating Earth’s climate, influencing weather conditions, providing sustenance for large populations, moderating anthropogenic climate change, encompassing massive biodiversity, and sustaining the global economy. Human activities are changing the oceans, stressing ocean health, threatening the critical services the ocean provides to society, with significant consequences for human well-being and safety, and economic prosperity. Effective and sustainable monitoring of the physical, biogeochemical state and ecosystem structure of the ocean, to enable climate adaptation, carbon management and sustainable marine resource management is urgently needed. The Argo program, a cornerstone of the Global Ocean Observing System (GOOS), has revolutionized ocean observation by providing real-time, freely accessible global temperature and salinity data of the upper 2,000m of the ocean (Core Argo) using cost-effective simple robotics. For the past 25 years, Argo data have underpinned many ocean, climate and weather forecasting services, playing a fundamental role in safeguarding goods and lives. Argo data have enabled clearer assessments of ocean warming, sea level change and underlying driving processes, as well as scientific breakthroughs while supporting public awareness and education. Building on Argo’s success, OneArgo aims to greatly expand Argo’s capabilities by 2030, expanding to full-ocean depth, collecting biogeochemical parameters, and observing the rapidly changing polar regions. Providing a synergistic subsurface and global extension to several key space-based Earth Observation missions and GOOS components, OneArgo will enable biogeochemical and ecosystem forecasting and new long-term climate predictions for which the deep ocean is a key component. Driving forward a revolution in our understanding of marine ecosystems and the poorly-measured polar and deep oceans, OneArgo will be instrumental to assess sea level change, ocean carbon fluxes, acidification and deoxygenation. Emerging OneArgo applications include new views of ocean mixing, ocean bathymetry and sediment transport, and ecosystem resilience assessment. Implementing OneArgo requires about $100 million annually, a significant increase compared to present Argo funding. OneArgo is a strategic and cost-effective investment which will provide decision-makers, in both government and industry, with the critical knowledge needed to navigate the present and future environmental challenges, and safeguard both the ocean and human wellbeing for generations to come. Feature Publications | Outstanding Scientific Publications Contact Sandra Bigley | Help