On 20 November 2025, the TELEMETRY Project organised a collaborative workshop at the headquarters of Engineering – Ingegneria Informatica S.p.A. in Rome, with ENG taking the lead in hosting and coordinating the meeting. The workshop brought together four Horizon Europe projects, TELEMETRY, COBALT Project, DOSS Project and EMERALD Project, with exploitation at the centre of the agenda.
The meeting was designed with a clear focus on exploitation ideas while also exploring areas for technical collaboration, including components, datasets, integrated solutions and scientific outputs. From the beginning, the objective was to move from exchange to alignment and from alignment to concrete next steps.

The day opened with a recap of insights from the previous online workshop. Representatives from the four projects shared key takeaways, highlighting common challenges as well as shared opportunities. This collective reflection created the foundation for the two main tracks that structured the discussions throughout the day, exploitation and technical collaboration.
In the exploitation track, participants engaged in an interactive session using tools, working in groups and mapping ideas in a practical and visual way. The discussion centred on identifying complementarities among results and drafting potential joint exploitation pathways. The emphasis was on coordination and coherence, ensuring that project outcomes could reinforce one another rather than evolve in parallel.
At the same time, the technical collaboration track examined opportunities for component-level or dataset sharing and encouraged brainstorming on integrated solutions and future technical synergies. Ideas were also exchanged on possible joint scientific collaboration, including papers, conferences and workshops, linking technical development with wider dissemination and research impact.

The plenary session brought the two tracks together. Participants reported back on their discussions, identifying overlaps and synergies and outlining next steps. The workshop concluded with consolidated action points and agreement on upcoming milestones for both exploitation and technical collaboration.
While broader technical cooperation was clearly part of the conversation, the Rome meeting made one point evident. Exploitation was not treated as an administrative requirement at the end of a project cycle, but as a strategic driver shaping collaboration from the outset.
