“The oceans are so much more than just bodies of water,” says Dr Rosalind Coggon, Principal Research Fellow at the University of Southampton and Chapter Author of FMRI’s latest report: ‘A UK Science Requirements Framework for Future Marine Research Infrastructure’.

The recently published framework, developed through extensive consultation with the UK ocean science community, defines the outcomes and infrastructure needed to enable world-class marine science. It sets out a clear, evidence-based foundation to guide future investment - supporting the research essential to addressing some of the most urgent challenges facing our ocean.


Doctor Rosalind Coggon shares her insights on the closing chapter of the report: 'Integrated Science Themes'.

Dr Rosalind Coggon

Our planet is more than the sum of its parts - the solid Earth, hydrosphere, atmosphere, and the life they support. Its state is shaped by complex interactions between these components, driven by diverse processes operating across vast spatial and temporal scales.

Because of this interconnectedness, changes in one part of the system can trigger wide-reaching consequences elsewhere. To understand how the Earth will respond to natural or human-driven changes, we must first unravel the processes that govern its behaviour - their sensitivities, thresholds, resilience, and the feedbacks that link them.

The oceans are so much more than just bodies of water. The basins that contain them, built of sediments and rocks, are active components of the ocean system. Seawater flows through them, giving rise to critical resources for a sustainable future, storing carbon in geological formations, and nurturing ecosystems found nowhere else on the planet. The oceans store and redistribute heat, shaping global climate and weather patterns. Interactions within the ocean, and at its boundaries - with the atmosphere, the seafloor, coastlines, and ice - link it to every part of the Earth system.

Through these interactions, the global ocean drives, records, and responds to changes across the planet. The UK’s marine research infrastructure provides a vital platform for studying not only the ocean, but also the broader Earth system - offering insights essential to understanding how our planet functions, adapts, and evolves. This knowledge is critical to addressing the major environmental challenges of our time.


On Monday 22 September, FMRI welcomed members of the marine science community to an online presentation of ‘A UK Science Requirements Framework for Future Marine Research Infrastructure’.

Lead Author Professor Alex David Rogers presented the recently published report and was joined by: 

View a recording of the Webinar here

[40 minute watch]

Download the Full Report.

Download the Summary Report.