The European Sea Ports Organization (ESPO) has officially joined the charter of the European Union mission called "Restore our oceans and waters" (Mission Restore our Ocean and Waters). With this incorporation, the entity representing European ports aligns its activity with three central objectives set by the EU for 2030: the recovery of biodiversity, the elimination of pollution, and the transition to a sustainable, carbon-neutral, and circular blue economy.
The accession, announced on March 30, underscores the role that European ports play in protecting marine ecosystems and transforming towards a decarbonized economic model in the maritime and coastal sectors. ESPO, which groups the port authorities of EU member states, as well as those from Norway, Iceland, and other countries in the European Economic Area, takes this step with a series of concrete commitments that will be channeled through its General Secretariat.
Among the planned actions is the public communication of the commitment made to the maritime sector as a whole, as well as the effort to encourage its members and network of contacts to subscribe to the charter and present their own environmental initiatives. ESPO has also committed to incorporating the actions of the mission and marine protection policies as points of discussion within its Sustainable Development Committee, which meets semi-annually.
The European port organization will also dedicate a specific space on its best practices webpage to port projects related to marine environment protection, and will actively participate in mission events with attendees as well as experts from the port sector.
The community mission to which ESPO has joined addresses one of the most urgent challenges for the EU: the restoration of the health status of the oceans, seas, and inland waters before the end of the current decade. To achieve this, it combines three lines of action: research and innovation, citizen participation, and strategic investments in the blue economy.
The three pillars of the mission align respectively with the EU Biodiversity Strategy for 2030, the Zero Pollution Action Plan for air, water, and soil, and the Sustainable Blue Economy Strategy, framed within the objectives of the European Climate Law.
To ensure the effective implementation of actions across the continent, the mission operates through so-called "lighthouses," territorial demonstration and scaling structures located in the main maritime and river basins of Europe: Atlantic-Arctic, Mediterranean, Baltic-North Sea, and Danube-Black Sea. These lighthouses function as laboratories where solutions developed under the mission are tested, deployed, and scaled.
A central element of the initiative is the charter itself, which invites member states, regions, cities, and socioeconomic agents to make concrete commitments in support of the established objectives. To date, the mission has received more than 1,000 commitments, which can be followed through a specific digital portal that enables tracking of progress, knowledge sharing, and access to funding and collaboration opportunities.
In the area of digital transition, the mission is developing a Digital Twin Ocean, a virtual representation that integrates large volumes of data and allows simulating the effects of different actions on marine and freshwater ecosystems, as well as predicting future scenarios. This tool will facilitate real-time monitoring, predictive analysis, and informed decision-making for the sustainable management of European aquatic ecosystems.
The mission involves a wide range of actors, from public and private organizations to coastal, riverine, and island communities, as well as companies, national, regional, and local administrations, and citizens, with the aim of engaging the greatest number possible of stakeholders in shaping the future of the continent's marine and freshwater ecosystems.

