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A game‑changer for ocean research: Inside the new Dal‑led Ocean Frontier Institute

- September 6, 2016

OFI will have a broad impact across the Northwest Atlantic region and in ocean science around the world.
OFI will have a broad impact across the Northwest Atlantic region and in ocean science around the world.

“It could be the opportunity of a generation.”

That’s the phrase Aldo Chircop chooses to describe the Dal-led and, in particular, its financial support from the Government of Canada. A faculty member in the Schulich School of Law and the Canada Research Chair in Maritime Law and Policy, Prof. Chircop is passionate about the need for a more robust 21st-century framework for studying the ocean.

“Ocean problems are so complex; we can’t do research the way we did in the past and think we are making a dent,” he explains. “We’ve got to deal with complex problems through new structures and processes that meet that complexity.”

At the other end of campus, Biologist Boris Worm knows as well as anyone that great science often comes from great teams. But he also knows the sort of teamwork required to address the challenges of a rapidly-changing ocean — issues like climate change, global food production and access to the Arctic — needs to be more collaborative, more interdisciplinary than ever before.

“We need to be able to talk more fluidly about problems and solutions at the same time, on the same teams,” says Dr. Worm, whose marine conservation research has generated headlines around the globe. “What matters most in ocean research right now is how we can turn our relationship with the ocean into a more productive and sustainable one. And that’s really the core mission, as I see it, of the Ocean Frontier Institute.”

Transformative commitment, global scale


So what exactly is the ?

In dollars and cents, the Ocean Frontier Institute (OFI) is an unprecedented investment in Canadian ocean research. On Tuesday, September 6, through its — the largest research grant in 鶹ý’s history. To that, OFI adds an additional $125 million in funds committed from its various partners, including a $25 million gift from philanthropist John Risley to support OFI operations. That makes it a $220-million project, a scale of ocean research the likes of which Canada has never seen before.

“This is a historic and transformative financial investment in Canadian ocean research,” says 鶹ý President Richard Florizone. “It positions 鶹ý — and Canada — as world leaders in ocean science, sustainability, management and innovation.”

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As a collaboration, OFI is transformative in its scope. At its heart is a new partnership between 鶹ý, Memorial University of Newfoundland and the University of Prince Edward Island. It then links this Atlantic Canadian ocean expertise with . OFI includes eight international ocean research institutes (including four of the top five in the world), three Canadian federal departments, the Royal Canadian Navy, the National Film Board, the Nova Scotia Community College and 19 industry partners ranging from local small businesses to international corporations like IBM.



But understanding what OFI represents — why it’s set to become one of the world’s most significant ocean science collaborations — requires an appreciation for the importance of its area of focus: the Northwest Atlantic and Canadian Arctic gateway.

“In terms of its absolute area, the Northwest Atlantic is really rather small, “explains Marlon Lewis, professor emeritus in Dal’s Department of Oceanography and the launch scientific director for OFI. “But it has unique characteristics that make it inordinately important for a whole wide range of physical, chemical and biological problems.”

The Northwest Atlantic is a place where ocean changes are happening first and fastest. It’s home to highly productive marine ecosystems and one of the most active carbon sinks on the planet, helping mitigate and respond to climate change yet also causing chemical changes to the water, the consequences of which are not fully understood. The Northwest Atlantic also produces 72 per cent of Canada’s fish and seafood exports, hosts major international shipping routes and is Canada’s gateway to the Arctic, critical for global security.

“OFI will help us better understand the changes happening in the Northwest Atlantic — from the complex interactions between the atmosphere and the upper ocean, to the shifting dynamics within its ecosystems,” explains Martha Crago, 鶹ý’s vice-president research and chair of OFI’s executive council. “But, just as importantly, it will connect that knowledge with policy experts, governments, industry — the partners needed to ensure safe and sustainable ocean development.”

“We all recognize that the ocean is changing, but we can’t just stop there — we need to come up with solutions for how to use the ocean responsibly in the face of those changes,” explains Paul Hill, current chair of Dal’s Department of Oceanography and who played a key role helping coordinate the OFI proposal. “And that requires partnerships: with academics to understand the complexity of ocean change; with governments mandated to deal with the ocean in a safe and sustainable way; and with industry to take economic advantage of the opportunities that are out there.”

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A rising tide


OFI is a key milestone in Dal’s long and impressive history of ocean research. Its core foundation was built over 50-plus years, but during the past decade a number of new initiatives have served to strengthen Dal’s ocean research capacity and enhance its international connections‎: the Dal-led , launched in 2007; the 2011 awarding of a , held by Doug Wallace; the 2012 launch of , a Network of Centres of Excellence focused on ocean hazards; that same year, where she signed an agreement between Halifax and Germany in ocean research and technology.

Then came news of the federal government’s competition: a total of $1.5 billion in available funding targeting university-led projects that would help propel Canada to global prominence in particular fields of expertise. Starting in 2014, Dr. Crago and a team of researchers across 鶹ý began discussing how this funding opportunity could propel Dal’s ocean research momentum into overdrive.

“We had been able to work with and see these big European projects and how valuable it was to be able to draw from and share resources with all the different institutes,” says Julie LaRoche, Canada Research Chair in Marine Biogeochemistry and Microbial Genomics, speaking about organizations like Germany’s GEOMAR. “When you collaborate on an international scale, you just have so many more opportunities to understand what’s going on in the ocean.”

and Germany’s would become two of the eight international institutes involved in OFI; together with the in Massachusetts and Columbia University’s , they represent four of the top five highest-ranked ocean research institutes in the world.

But OFI would also need to leverage Canadian expertise. As the project took shape, it began to build the framework for a new institutional collaboration with Memorial University of Newfoundland and the University of Prince Edward Island. Each brought something important to the table. In UPEI’s case, it was the team of Ian Gardiner, , and its research on aquaculture and marine disease control and prevention. Memorial offered scientific and applied strength in offshore fisheries, aquaculture and coastal community engagement.

“There are a lot of great researchers at both Dal and Memorial who are collaborating, but there are many projects where we could better draw on each other’s work,” says Paul Snelgrove, Memorial professor and director of the NSERC-funded . “OFI provides an opportunity to wrap these pieces together in a much more effective way, so the sum is more effective than the individual parts.”

Understanding and addressing ocean change


The core of OFI is built around 17 interlinked research modules, each tackling a different ocean topic or challenge from an interdisciplinary perspective. Through these, OFI will provide funding to support research and deliver data science and technology tools to policy-makers, scientists and industry. Some of the areas where OFI hopes to make an impact include: improving prediction and mitigation of major storms; better management of the ocean’s living resources; more sustainable approaches to aquaculture; marine transportation policy and risk reduction; and new data capture and IT tools to monitor the ocean.



At the same time, OFI will offer to enhance Canada’s ocean expertise and help educate future ocean scientists, leaders and innovators. These include a training program for PhD students and postdocs, a visiting fellows initiative and , an education partnership between 鶹ý and the National Film Board.

Overseeing all of this activity will be OFI’s CEO, Wendy Watson-Wright. A three-time Dal alum, Dr. Watson-Wright comes to OFI from Fisheries and Oceans Canada (DFO) where she served for a number of years as DFO’s assistant deputy minister of science, and most recently worked as regional director-general for the Gulf Region. She has significant international experience, having led UNESCO’s Intergovernmental Oceanographic Commission as executive secretary and assistant director general from 2010 to 2015.

“We have the best in the world in this collaboration at OFI,” says Dr. Watson-Wright. “I know we can be a global leader in the many facets of ocean research and education, and we are thrilled to have been given this opportunity."

Assisting her in guiding OFI through its initial months will be Marlon Lewis, set to lead OFI’s research program until a permanent scientific director can be recruited. A veteran of Dal’s Department of Oceanography for more than three decades, he is also the founder of Halifax ocean technology company .

“I’m excited for the opportunity to help shape the integration, the initial interactions between the different groups involved, and to help bring people together,” says Dr. Lewis. “And not just within OFI but more broadly — working to integrate better with industry, through organizations like COVE [Halifax’s Centre for Ocean Ventures and Entrepreneurship] and others.”

Meeting a global challenge


It’s this broad network of connections — between universities, international institutes, government labs, industry — that has so many in Dal’s research community excited by OFI’s potential.

“There will be an equal opportunity for really terrific research to better understand the ocean, as well as to expand the benefits that we will be able to derive from the ocean while still sustaining it,” explains Sara Iverson, Dal biology professor and scientific director of the Ocean Tracking Network. “That combined focus is so important to what OFI is looking to achieve.”

“It’s going to just exponentially explode the ocean research capacity at 鶹ý, and with such strong national and international partnerships, it will be one of the most significant international institutional efforts ever put forward for the ocean.

"It’s a very big deal.”

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