December 2024

OCEANS 2024 Halifax – an Overview

Mae L. Seto, Technical Program Chair, Christopher Whitt, General Co-Chair and Amy Deeb, Student Poster Competition Co-Chair

Located on North America’s east coast, Halifax is Canada’s largest centre for ocean research, innovation, and industry. From September 23 – 26, 2024, Halifax welcomed the world-wide oceans community to OCEANS 2024 Halifax. The conference  was held downtown at the Halifax Convention Centre.  1600+ conference attendees were registered with 90 exhibiting organizations.  What was notable about this conference was the extensive papers, panels and activities that spanned a wide range of interests to the theme of Aligning Diverse Communities for Tomorrow’s Oceans.

The Halifax Convention Centre was the venue for OCEANS 2024 Halifax.

Local Organizing Committee

The LOC and other assistants responsible for the OCEANS 2024 Conference. Co-Chairs Christopher Whitt (foreground, left) and Jim Hanlon (foreground, right) hold the plaque recognizing the team’s efforts.

A dedicated team of volunteers and assistants from university, government and industry contributed to the success of OCEANS 2024 Halifax.

The LOC and other assistants responsible for the OCEANS 2024 Conference.  Co-Chairs Christopher Whitt (foreground, left) and Jim Hanlon (foreground, right) hold the plaque recognizing the team’s efforts.

LOC member list

General Co-Chair Christopher Whitt
General Co-Chair Jim Hanlon
Technical Chair Mae Seto
Finance Chair Krista Martell
Exhibit Chair Jim Hanlon
Student Poster Competition Chair Amy Deeb

Jordan Ross

Members-at-Large Cathy Hogan

Sheila Patterson

Bridget Archibald

Scottina Jackson

Publicity Sara Simpson
Volunteer Coordinator Samantha Best
Panels and Townhalls Hunter Alloway
MTS Liaison Zdenka Willis
IEEE OES Liaison Diane DiMassa
Diverse Attendance Committee Lucija Prelovec

Anna Naylor

Secretariat Support Kes Morton

Pisces Research Project Management

 

It was standing room only in the underwater acoustics sessions.

Participation

There were over 1600+ attendees registered for which 500 were affiliated with exhibitors.  90 organizations in total were represented.  In addition to the traditional paper presenters and exhibitors, there were indigenous members, lawyers, policy-makers, Coast Guard, Canadian Armed Forces, innovators, analysts, technologists,  and practitioners.

Technical Program

The program was designed around the theme of Aligning Diverse Communities for Tomorrow’s Oceans.  It spanned the usual oceans topics as well as topics of local interest to industry, government, and academia.  It was noteworthy that there were 12 marine robotics sessions and sessions in space-based ocean observation, climate change, renewable energies and the Arctic. The 3 underwater acoustics sessions had a heavy emphasis on marine mammal mitigation driven by local interest.  Accounting for no-shows on the schedule, a total of 320 papers were presented distributed over 70 sessions.   A record within recent OCEANS conferences.  The sessions were generally well-attended.

Elder Albert Marshall provides Mi’kmaq wisdom and perspectives on the oceans and current issues.

Plenaries

OCEANS 2024 was pleased to have the following plenaries. IEEE and MTS award winners were also recognized during the opening plenary.

Indigenous Welcome 

  • Albert Marshall: Mi’kmaq natural resources and

environment spokesperson

Elder Albert Marshall provides Mi’kmaq wisdom and perspectives on the oceans and current issues.

Opening Plenary:  Diversity in the Ocean Sector and the Changing Workforce

  • Rear-Admiral Josée Kurtz, Canadian Armed Forces

Canadian Armed Forces Rear-Admiral Kurtz delivers an informative and inspiring plenary to open OCEANS 2024 Halifax.

Plenary Panel: The Impact of Public Sector Policy on Ocean Technology Innovation:

  • Justin Manley Founder, Just Innovation, Inc.
  • Carl Goudman Director, U.S. Integrated Ocean

Observing System (IOOS)

  • Paul Snelgrove University Research Professor of Ocean

Sciences and Biology at Memorial

University of Newfoundland

  • Ken Paul member of Wolastoqey First Nation at

Neqotkuk (New Brunswick); principal of Pokiok Associates, Lead Fisheries Negotiator and Research Coordinator for the Wolastoqey Nation

Plenary panel on Impact of Public Sector Policy on Ocean Technology Innovation.

Elder Albert Marshall provides Mi’kmaq wisdom and perspectives on the oceans and current issues.

Panel Discussions

The panels complemented the technical paper sessions and brought different players to the conference in keeping with the theme.   There was a record number of panels (35) to foster dialog on timely topics that include: carbon removal and reduction; space-based observations; global shipping; autonomous surface ships; ocean sustainability; offshore wind; growing the blue economy; arctic defence; AI; digital twinning; protecting at-risk species; ocean-going robots, interoperability through standards and more.  Effort was made to schedule panels, so they do not conflict with technical papers on the same topics.

Student Poster Competition

The OCEANS Student Poster Competition drew over 110 submissions this year and after a rigorous two-round review, 21 outstanding students were invited to travel to Halifax and register for the conference supported by a grant from the Office of Naval Research Global. The 20 competitors who attended presented their research, networked with professionals, and met like-minded students from all over the world. We congratulate the winners and wish all of the participants the best in their future oceans careers.

Canadian Armed Forces Rear-Admiral Kurtz delivers an informative and inspiring plenary to open OCEANS 2024 Halifax.

Social Events

Welcome Reception

The Ocean Sunset Welcome was the first social event and occurred on the first day. With a drink in-hand, many conference attendees found their collaborators or reconnected with colleagues and friends at OCEANS 2024.

Exhibitor Reception

On Tuesday afternoon, delegates enjoyed additional networking time on the exhibit hall floor, as the Canada Pavilion hosted a welcome reception after the afternoon break, followed closely by the traditional exhibitor reception with extended exhibit hall hours. There were samples of local delicacies on offer and the hall was full of energy until closing time.

Gala Dinner

The gala dinner was a hit.  Halifax departed from the traditional sit-down dinner and tried a new approach.  After the announcements and recognitions of the LOC, the ‘meal’ of the evening started.  The meal was in the form of a wandering tapas event amongst 25 vendors and food stations to sample the best of Halifax cuisine.  There was sufficient diversity there to satisfy a wide variety of appetites and preferences.  This was followed by music and a dance.  This format allowed attendees to speak with people other than the ones at their table to facilitate networking. Reviews to date on the gala dinner have been very positive.

Plenary panel on Impact of Public Sector Policy on Ocean Technology Innovation.

Exhibition

There were 90 organizations exhibiting that ranged from local start-ups to established companies to universities to government agencies.  Due to the Space-Based Ocean Observation sessions and themes, MDA Space and NASA Ecological Conservation Program were there.    Exhibitors came from Canada, Australia, France, Iceland,  Italy, Japan, Norway, Portugal, Sweden, UK and the U.S.

OCEANS 2024 Halifax is grateful to its patrons for their support.  This includes NOAA, Esri, Province of Nova Scotia, NASA Ecological Conservation Program, Sea Bird Scientific, Ocean Networks Canada, Mitre and IORE.

The contestants from the Student Poster Competition along with the Student Poster Competition Chairs, judges and MTS supporters. Congratulations to all students who qualified for the competition.

Ancilliary Events

OCEANS 2024 Halifax also hosted an HKN (eta-kappa-nu) induction ceremony for eligible attendees from all over the world.  This was performed by the Canadian Atlantic Section HKN chapter Lambda Theta.   In total, 9 conference attendees were inducted.

OCEANS 2024 Halifax Co-Chair Christopher Whitt (with yellow sash) and to his right, OES President Brandy Armstrong, with 9 newly inducted HKN members from multiple nations.

Technical Tours

The Halifax Convention Centre is downtown, which is only a few blocks from Dalhousie University – home to world renowned ocean research laboratories and facilities.  Tours of Dalhousie University’s Faculty of Engineering were hosted.  Attendees learned about the leading-edge research in marine:  robotics, underwater acoustics, materials and advanced manufacturing, communications, sensing, water resources, and hydrogen.  They also toured facilities like the above-water and the underwater anechoic chambers.  Many lively discussions were held between Nova Scotia’s leading oceans researchers and the conference attendees.  It ended up being another networking opportunity for many.

Overall, OCEANS 2024 Halifax was well-attended. Certainly one of the larger events post-pandemic.   The emphasis to bring together diverse players and communities to deliberate and decide on the ocean of tomorrow was successful as much more than the academic community and exhibitors were at OCEANS.  OCEANS 2024 Halifax would like to thank the participants, exhibitors and patrons for their contributions.  We look forward with anticipation to OCEANS 2025 Brest.  See you soon!

Ocean Sunset Welcome was the first social event of the conference. It occurred at the end of day 1.
Attendees wandered amongst 25 food vendors and filled their plates with the cuisine they preferred at the gala dinner.
Attendees mixing and re-grouping between servings of tapas which enhanced networking and socializing at the gala dinner.
OCEANS 2024 Halifax Co-Chair Christopher Whitt (with yellow sash) and to his right, OES President Brandy Armstrong, with 9 newly inducted HKN members from multiple nations.