Aerial view of open ocean waves for an article about the E.U. ocean investment of €3.5 billion

The E.U. makes its biggest-ever ocean investment at €3.5 billion

At the annual Our Ocean Conference, the European Union announced a €3.5 billion commitment to ocean conservation — the largest single ocean pledge any government has made at the forum. The package targets marine pollution, fisheries reform, blue economy innovation, and the international legal frameworks that govern waters beyond any nation’s borders.

At a glance

  • E.U. ocean investment: The full €3.5 billion spans marine pollution reduction, sustainable fisheries, blue technology, and international governance — the bloc’s single largest commitment to ocean health.
  • Pollution and fisheries funding: Nearly €1 billion targets marine pollution prevention under the Recovery and Resilience Facility, while €1.9 billion supports fisheries and aquaculture reform across member states including Greece, Italy, and Spain.
  • High Seas Treaty support: More than €1.3 million is earmarked to implement the BBNJ Agreement, alongside €40 million to help African, Caribbean, and Pacific partners ratify it and build the legal and technical capacity to act on it.

Why the high seas need this now

International waters — the high seas — cover nearly two-thirds of the world’s ocean surface. For most of human history, they’ve been largely ungoverned. No single nation owns them, and no legal framework has been strong enough to protect them from overfishing, deep-sea mining, plastic accumulation, and accelerating climate change.

The BBNJ Agreement, sometimes called the High Seas Treaty, changed that. Adopted by the United Nations in 2023 C.E. after nearly two decades of negotiations, it created the first binding international framework for conserving marine biodiversity beyond national jurisdiction. The E.U. has been one of its most active champions. The new funding is meant to move the treaty from signature to implementation — a step that routinely stalls without dedicated resources.

The €40 million earmarked for African, Caribbean, and Pacific nations is especially significant. These countries are often the most exposed to ocean-related climate risks and the least equipped to navigate complex international legal processes. Funding their participation isn’t charity — it’s recognition that a treaty only works when the nations most affected by it can actually enforce it.

Coastal jobs and the blue economy

A large share of the pledge connects directly to the livelihoods of people who depend on the ocean. The €1.9 billion for sustainable fisheries isn’t simply an environmental investment — it funds the modernization of an industry that employs millions across Europe’s coastal regions. For communities in Portugal, Croatia, and along the Atlantic coast of France, healthy fish stocks are an economic lifeline. Overfishing has depleted those stocks over decades, and reform is politically painful. Funding helps smooth that transition, giving fishing communities a path to adapt rather than resist.

The pledge also invests in what the E.U. calls the “blue economy” — marine renewable energy, blue biotechnology, underwater robotics, clean shipping, and ocean observation through programs like Copernicus. These aren’t abstract research priorities. They represent the next generation of jobs in coastal economies, and the E.U. is betting that moving early will shape the sector for decades.

Setting a bar for other wealthy nations

The Our Ocean Conference has become one of the most important annual forums for ocean commitments, drawing governments, researchers, civil society, and industry. The E.U.’s announcement is the largest single pledge the conference has ever seen from any actor.

That scale matters because of what it signals. Ocean conservation has long suffered from a gap between declared ambition and actual funding. A €3.5 billion commitment — with specific allocations, named programs, and institutional accountability through bodies like the European Investment Bank and the European Environment Agency — is harder to dismiss as aspirational rhetoric than a vague declaration.

The investment also connects to the global renewable energy transition. As marine energy becomes an increasingly realistic pillar of the shift away from fossil fuels, this pledge directly supports its development at scale. Efforts like this one rhyme with what’s happening in places like Ghana, where a new marine protected area at Cape Three Points is demonstrating what locally anchored ocean conservation can look like. International funding and local governance don’t have to be in tension — they work best together.

Still, money pledged is not money spent. Large institutional commitments carry real risks: bureaucratic delays, implementation gaps, and accountability failures that can blunt their impact. The E.U. will need sustained political will and transparent reporting to ensure these funds reach their intended goals — and the communities and ecosystems that depend on them.

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For more on this story, see: Green Forum EU

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