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OBIS and Global Biodiversity Information Facility update and expand cooperation agreement

OBIS and GBIF — the Global Biodiversity Information Facility — have signed a new five-year agreement to promote further cooperation across a wide range of activities and services between the two global biodiversity data networks.

The Letter of Agreement targets both technical collaboration covering data standards, publishing and processing; and institutional collaboration to ensure closer ties between OBIS and GBIF nodes, shared training opportunities and aligned documentation.

This is the second multi-year agreement between the two networks, which both mark their 20th anniversaries in 2020-2021.

GBIF — the Global Biodiversity Information Facility — was formally established in September 2001 as a voluntary collaboration between governments, with the aim of providing anyone, anywhere with free and open access to data about all types of life on Earth. It works through a network of national and organizational nodes, with more than 1,600 institutions worldwide, mobilizing data via the global platform GBIF.org operated by a secretariat based in Copenhagen, Denmark. OBIS aims to be the most comprehensive data and information gateway on the diversity, distribution and abundance of marine life to support its Member States in achieving a healthy and resilient ocean ecosystem.

GBIF and OBIS already collaborate in many areas, such as working with the same data standards and supporting tools like the Integrated Publishing Toolkit, developed by the GBIF community and used by OBIS as the recommended platform for sharing marine data. However, both networks recognize that their respective user communities and data-publishing institutions will benefit from more streamlined ways of working together.

The specific areas covered by the new Letter of Agreement include:

As GBIF and OBIS both enter their third decade, it’s increasingly important that we pool our resources and the experience built up by both communities. This new agreement offers many opportunities to work more closely together than ever to ensure that research and policy on marine biodiversity benefit from the best and most complete data available.
- Joe Miller, GBIF Executive Secretary
Together, the communities of researchers and data managers that use and contribute to GBIF and OBIS have the knowledge and skills to help the world address threats to biodiversity and find pathways to sustainable ecosystems. The new agreement helps both communities continue realizing new opportunities for collaboration toward common goals.
- Sky Bristol, co-Chair of the OBIS Steering Group.