Two UM researchers, Dr Matthew Agius and Mr Daniele Caruana, participated in the second consortium meeting for the held at the (INGV) headquarters in Rome on 12-13 November 2025.
Project SENSEI (Smart European Networks for Sensing the Environment and Internet quality) aims to develop devices and technologies that transform the global telecommunication fibre network into a pervasive distributed sensor, making the network more resilient and efficient.
During the meeting, participants had the opportunity to visit the INGV seismic control room, the national hub for real-time seismic surveillance, and visit the headquarters for the Italian research and education network, (Gruppo per l'Armonizzazione delle Reti della Ricerca), the consortium that manages Italy's high-performance research and education network.
The meeting consisted of discussions and a detailed review of the project's progress after the first operational year. A substantial part was dedicated to developing analysis techniques for diverse geophysical signatures and their potential to improve detection and early-warning applications. Partners explored the use of AI and other advanced filtering methods, as well as their implementation in real-world scenarios.
The meeting also reviewed progress in photonics and measurement techniques, integration with telecommunication infrastructure, and included an important discussion on the standardisation of measurements for seismological use.
is a project funded by Horizon Europe aimed at turning existing fibre-optic communication networks into distributed sensors capable of detecting environmental and geophysical signals, to improve monitoring, early warning and scientific research across Europe.