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Inflation Reduction Act Funding to Help GCOOS Enhance Ocean Observations in Support of Coastal Communities, Climate Resilience and the Gulf’s Blue Economy

New ocean projects across Gulf of Mexico states are getting under way this month thanks to federal funding support through the Inflation Reduction Act, which is supporting the equitable service delivery and modernization of the U.S. Integrated Ocean Observing System (IOOS) Regional Associations, including the Gulf of Mexico Coastal Ocean Observing System (GCOOS).

GCOOS is the Gulf of Mexico regional component of IOOS and the only certified system dedicated solely to the Gulf. The nonprofit organization housed at Texas A&M University provides on-demand information about the Gulf’s coastal and open-ocean waters that is accurate, reliable and benefits people, ecosystems and the economy. GCOOS is a network of business leaders, marine scientists, resource managers, governmental and non-governmental organizations and other stakeholder groups that combine their data to provide timely information about our oceans.

With members from Texas, Louisiana, Mississippi, Alabama and Florida, the GCOOS observing system provides observations and products needed by users in this region for:

The total $101.5 million in IRA funding across the 11 Regional Associations through 12 awards is supporting ongoing data collection in U.S. ocean, coastal and Great Lakes waters and the development of infrastructure and tools that help make the data accessible to the public.

Some $5 million in project support will initially come to Gulf of Mexico states via GCOOS, said Executive Director Dr. Jorge Brenner. “The IRA funding will help GCOOS fill observing gaps and expand asset networks across Gulf states to support coastal resilience, including at under-served communities,” he said. “The new support nearly doubles our annual federal funding and will provide much-needed capital to help fulfill our Strategic Plan and GCOOS Build-Out plan goals.”

GCOOS will use the funding to support existing and new projects in and around the Gulf of Mexico, including Texas, Louisiana, Mississippi, Alabama and Florida. The projects will deploy assets that complement and fill observation gaps in existing networks, build new asset networks and enhance regional technical capacity to provide equitable data service delivery to communities to build coastal resilience. These include new observation projects and tools co-developed with frontline and Indigenous communities to measure and equip them with knowledge about surface currents, flooding, harmful algal blooms, rip currents, coral bleaching and other parameters. The five-year projects will also validate offshore data and support the development of multilingual program materials.

Projects and Principal Investigators

Texas

Texas – Louisiana

Louisiana

Mississippi

Alabama

Florida

Offshore