A large group of people pose for a photo outdoors on a lawn, surrounded by palm trees and under a cloudy sky. The group consists of a diverse mix of men and women of different ages, most of whom are dressed in business casual or formal attire. A white banner is held at the front, which reads: ‘FUTURO – Future West African Marine Ecosystem – Co-Design Kick-Off Workshop – Saly/Senegal.’ The logos of various supporting organisations are located at the bottom of the banner. A light blue flag with the FUTURO logo is held on the right side of the group.
From 24 to 26 November, the GEOMAR Helmholtz Centre for Ocean Research Kiel, together with project partners from West Africa and Europe, including the ZMT, organised a co-design workshop for the FUTURO (Future West African Marine Ecosystem) research project in the Senegalese coastal town of Saly. Nearly 70 participants attended the event. | Photo: Saly Living Lab

19/12/2025 | From November 24 to 26, project partners from West Africa and Europe, jointly conducted a co-design workshop for the FUTURO (Future West African Marine Ecosystem) research project in the Senegalese coastal town of Saly. The nearly 70 participants from various sectors, including 50 from seven West African countries and regional organizations, developed concrete research topics and programme elements for FUTURO. One such element is an international research expedition that will investigate the tropical Atlantic off the coast of West Africa for a year, starting in 2029. All participants adopted the "Saly Declaration," which calls for international cooperation and defines key priorities and concrete elements of the programme.

The ongoing changes in the marine ecosystem off West Africa are complex and challenging: rising temperatures, declining oxygen levels, acidification, and increasing overfishing are shaping a region that provides a livelihood for hundreds of millions of people. The international research programme FUTURO (Future West African Marine Ecosystems), currently kick-started by GEOMAR, addresses these challenges. As one of its major activities, it will conduct a large-scale, year-long ship-based campaign off the West African coast, beginning in 2029. The aim is to establish a scientific basis for the protection and sustainable use of the West African marine and coastal ecosystems – particularly in light of accelerating climate change and fishing pressure.

FUTURO focuses on co-design

Off the coast of West Africa lies an exceptionally productive and biodiverse ecosystem that provides food and income for 200 million people. The FUTURO study area therefore encompasses the waters from Mauritania in the north to Sierra Leone in the south, extending as far as Cape Verde. The planned one-year research expedition aims to improve our understanding and sustainable management of the tropical upwelling zone in the Atlantic Ocean off West Africa, involving stakeholders from decision-makers, society, and science at an early stage.

Therefore, the FUTURO research programme has adopted a co-design approach: research is developed jointly with the people who live, work, or hold political responsibility in the local communities. A three-day workshop in the Senegalese coastal town of Saly this week brought together representatives from numerous partner organizations. These included researchers, political decision-makers, members of civil society organizations, and representatives from the private sector. Nearly 70 participants from the seven West African countries of Cabo Verde, Gambia, Guinea, Guinea-Bissau, Mauritania, Senegal, and Sierra Leone, as well as from Europe, met to jointly develop and refine the FUTURO research programme.

ZMT played a key role in co-organizing the workshop and contributed its long-standing expertise in co-design approaches and methods to the conceptual development of the event. The workshop was jointly moderated by ZMT's Rebecca Lahl and Moussa Gueye from Senegal. In addition, ZMT researchers Achim Schlüter, Tim Rixen and Hauke Kegler were present on site, contributing their scientific expertise, supporting the development of concrete project ideas, and engaging in in-depth discussions with partners. Beyond the workshop, ZMT will continue to actively contribute to the co-design process, further developing project ideas together with partners and supporting the acquisition of third-party funding.

A smiling woman with short blond hair holds a microphone and speaks. She is wearing a white blouse with green and yellow floral patterns and a name tag that reads “Rebecca Lahl, Facilitator, Germany” along with the FUTURO logo.

Rebecca Lahl from ZMT | Photo: Saly Living Lab

Bringing together actors from politics, society and science

FUTURO is an officially endorsed project of the United Nations Decade of Ocean Science for Sustainable Development (2021-2030) under the umbrella of the “SEAWARD Africa” Decade Programme. It includes the marine research institutes Instituto de Mar (IMar), Cabo Verde; Centre de Recherche et de Documentation sur les Traditions Orales et les Langues de Dakar (CRODT), Senegal; Institut Mauritanien de Recherches Océanographiques et des Pêches (IMROP), Mauritania; and the Leibniz Centre for Tropical Marine Research (ZMT) in Bremen.

For the FUTURO project, co-design means developing research questions and approaches together with the impacted local people as equal partners in an interactive process, in order to create solutions that meet their actual needs and local circumstances. Only in this way can knowledge be generated that enjoys broad acceptance and has a long-term impact," says Prof. Dr. Arne Körtzinger, chemical oceanographer at GEOMAR and scientific coordinator of FUTURO.

The “Saly Declaration” as a joint signal

At the conclusion of the workshop, participants adopted the “Saly Declaration” – a strong call to participate in FUTURO, to strengthen cooperation between science and society in West Africa, and to support it with the necessary political and financial framework. “With the Saly Declaration, we are jointly assuming responsibility for the important marine ecosystem off the coast of West Africa, one of the most productive regions in the ocean,” said Edwin Mwashinga, Program Officer at IOC AFRICA.

What happens next?

The preparatory phase for the year-long field study is currently underway. In the coming months, the workshop results will be incorporated into the work programme and the development of further scientific modules for FUTURO. Simultaneously, the partner institutions are working on, among other things, funding plans and the establishment of transdisciplinary working groups. The actual year-long research expedition is scheduled to begin in 2029, followed by a synthesis phase in which new findings will be jointly evaluated and translated into policy recommendations. The long-term goal is to establish FUTURO as an international programme with strong African leadership.