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Artificial Intelligence and the Blue Economy in Iceland
In the port of Reykjavík, the Iceland Ocean Cluster has turned a concept into reality: artificial intelligence applied to the blue economy can be the key to uniting sustainability, value, and technology.
For years, the cluster has brought together companies, researchers, and startups around a common goal — making the seafood supply chain more efficient and more respectful of marine resources.
The recent roundtable held in the Icelandic capital highlighted how digital innovation is becoming central to maritime economy strategies. Here, AI is not an experiment but an invisible infrastructure supporting every stage of production.
From Data to Value
In Iceland, technology is never an end in itself. Sensors and predictive models collect and interpret vast amounts of data, improving biomass management and optimizing fishing and processing operations.
The “100% Fish” philosophy, which aims to use every part of the fish, has found a powerful ally in artificial intelligence: algorithms capable of identifying alternative uses for waste and by-products, transforming them into collagen, fertilizers, supplements, and bioplastics.
The result is a fully functioning circular economy, where scientific research interacts with industry, and sustainability becomes a driver of competitiveness.
People Remain at the Center
The expansion of artificial intelligence within the blue economy is transforming the very nature of work in the maritime sector.
Automation reduces time but increases the need for digital skills. In Iceland, new professionals are being trained — technicians who can read ocean data, system analysts, and operators specializing in marine sensor maintenance.
Human capital remains the most valuable resource: without human knowledge, data are just numbers. This is the difference between an industry that merely modernizes and one that truly evolves.
A Message to the Mediterranean
For Italy’s seafood sector, the Icelandic model sends a clear signal.
Our often family-run fisheries could benefit greatly from digitalization: better catch planning, reduced fuel consumption, enhanced by-product valorization, and improved traceability.
But transformation requires a collaborative network between institutions, research, and businesses. Innovation does not emerge from a single project, but from a shared vision that connects the sea, the territory, and industry.
The Sea as an Intelligent Ecosystem
Looking to Iceland, a simple principle emerges: artificial intelligence applied to the blue economy is not a goal but a new language.
A language that translates the sea into data, connects people and processes, and enables more informed decision-making.
For nations that live by the sea, embracing this perspective means rethinking the entire production paradigm — moving from an extractive to a regenerative economy.
It is a cultural challenge before being a technological one. But those who face it with vision and courage, as Iceland is doing, will write the future of the ocean economy.
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L’articolo Artificial Intelligence and the Blue Economy in Iceland proviene da Pesceinrete.
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