From 5 to 9 May 2025, Rome hosted the inaugural GEO Global Forum, drawing practitioners, researchers and policy-makers together for five days of plenaries, technical sessions and side-events , thereby promoting a new path to empower informed and ambitious actions to ensure food security, restore ecosystems, prevent disasters, and confront the triple planetary crisis, transforming the Sustainable Development Goals into an achievable reality. 

Among the Forum’s core themes were the transformation of complex datasets into decision-ready metrics, the reinforcement of open-data infrastructures, and the promotion of seamless interoperability. The GEO Global Forum also marked several milestones, including the launch of a dynamic platform for advancing Earth Intelligence for all, the celebration of GEO’s 20th anniversary, and the adoption of the Post-2025 GEO Work Programme to deliver on GEO’s ambitious new strategy. 

The GEO Global Forum 2025 also placed a strong emphasis on youth engagement within the Earth Observations community. The Forum showcased the pivotal role of young professionals through initiatives like the Youth Ideathon, highlighting how new generations are driving innovation and shaping the future of Earth Intelligence for all. Additionally, the 2025 GEO Awards ceremony recognized outstanding individuals and organizations whose work has significantly advanced the use of Earth Observations for sustainable development, disaster resilience, and environmental stewardship, further demonstrating the GEO community’s dedication to fostering both innovation and impact. 

20250508 114444 minA panel of five youth, during the plenary session "Keeping our Promises to Young People", moderated by Samuel Amos of the GEO Secretariat, highlighted the crucial role of youth engagement in advancing Earth Intelligence for All.

In the lead up to the Global Forum, the GEO Youth Ideathon brought early career professionals together in Rome for an intensive, hands-on opportunity to discover and enhance skills in the application of Earth Observations to address a wide range of societal and environmental challenges. The event was also a great opportunity to receive inputs and coaching from experts and industry leaders, as well as network and expand professional links across the GEO community. Among the participants for the event was Alex Massot, Scientific Project Officer at the Mountain Research Initiative Coordination Office, who was among the 11 selected participants among 230 of applications received. Over the course of the Ideathon, participants were grouped in teams and visited four field sites before embarking on rapid-prototype sprints. Every team applied a “problem-first” methodology, conducting structured interviews with local stakeholders—vineyard managers, aquaculturists, campsite operators and a regional GIS firm—so that each prototype directly addressed an operational need.

IMG 1635 1During the field visit to Merumalia Vineyards, participants not only received technical presentations on drones and air quality monitoring sensors, but also took part in sessions focused on communication skills.

dd6f478c 3df0 407b af7e 6ed3406e7162 1024x768The eleven participants with organisers Valentijn Venus (Ramani) and Samuel Amos (GEO Secretariat), together with Anna Burzykowska, Copernicus Innovation Officer at the European Space Agency (ESA).

Together, the GEO Global Forum and Youth Ideathon delivered a powerful combination of strategic vision and grassroots innovation. For Alex, who is also part of the GEO Mountains Secretariat team:

“These events underscored the need for rigorous data standards, stakeholder and user-centred design, contributions towards shared community data and information repositories, and active collaboration with end users—cornerstones for unlocking EO’s full potential in fragile mountain environments.” 

During the Forum’s Community Events segments, Dr. Carolina Adler from the MRI and Prof. Antonello Provenzale from CNR Italy, presented GEO Mountains as Co-Leadsin a joint session with colleagues from ArcticGEOSS to present current and future activities as part of the GEO Work Programme, including prospects for closer “cool collaborations” on issues pertaining to cold-regions, worldwide. This impetus was also inspired by stated goals to close observation gaps, as part of the observance of the UN-declared International Year for Glacier’s Presentation 20205, the 5-Years fo Action for the Development of Mountain Regions 2023-2025, the UN-declared Decade of Action for Cryospheric Sciences 2025-2034, and the ramp up period towards the 5th International Polar Year 2032-33.. 

In parallel, GEO Mountains also featured an e-poster as part of an exhibition hosted by EuroGEO at the European Commission exhibition booth. In addition, the ODOK workshop showcased national GEO initiatives and their integration within national GEOs Knowledge Hubs, while the GEO Knowledge Hub was presented as on the GEO community’s key resources for discovering and sharing data and information. Contributors to the in Situ data community shared ongoing efforts to enhance monitoring networks, close critical data gaps, and improve coordination among providers. The workshop concluded with a strong emphasis on the TRUST, FAIR and CARE principles, and introduced DMP OPIDoR—a practical tool for defining data-management and sharing workflows across projects. 

image 2 1024x768Paola De Salvo and Felipe Carlos, both from the GEO Secretariat, presenting the GEO Knowledge Hub to the participants at the GEO Data and Knowledge Booth.

image 1 editedDr. Carolina Adler, Executive Director, and Alex Massot, Scientific Project Officer, representing both the Mountain Research Initative and GEO Mountains at the GEO Global Forum 2025.

As part of the formal segments for the Forum, notably during the “GEO-20 Plenary”, a key notable outcome was the presentation and adoption by the Plenary of the GEO Post-2025 Work Programme, in which GEO Mountains is once again confirmed as a GEO Initiative. We take this opportunity to thank all involved in the great outcome for GEO and for mountains, including GEO Mountains and MRI members, the MRI Coordination Office and GEO Mountains Secretariat, plus the grateful support and leadership from the Swiss Federal Office for the Environment as Swiss GEO Principal and the Swiss Agency for Develpment and Cooperation for their financial contribution to GEO Mountains as part of the Adaptation at Altitude programme. 

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