Cloud-native
Immediate deployment, EU-hosted infrastructure
Europe's maritime surveillance operates through 400+ authorities with incompatible systems. When a shadow tanker goes dark. When a migrant vessel sends its final distress call. When a pipeline saboteur cuts the cable. The data exists. The connections don't.
Welcome to the European Maritime Operations Centre, a simulation based on documented incidents and real system architectures. You'll face three crises that tested EU maritime security. Your decisions will determine outcomes.
You're operating with the same fragmented systems that failed in the real incidents.
Traditional maritime surveillance treats each data source as a separate system. Argus treats them as facets of a single intelligence picture, automatically correlated, continuously updated, instantly actionable.
Unified Operational Picture
Post-Schrems II, EU data sovereignty regulations require sensitive maritime intelligence to remain under European legal jurisdiction. Maritime surveillance data, vessel movements, ownership structures, enforcement actions, is processed and stored exclusively within EU borders, ensuring full regulatory alignment.
Irish HQ, EU-only data processing
Essential entity controls implemented
Full SafeSeaNet/VTMIS alignment
EUROSUR data standards supported
Operational phase participant
ISMS framework implemented
Your agency has invested years in current systems. Argus CGANS doesn't demand you abandon that investment, it makes it more valuable by connecting what was disconnected.
Disconnected systems, fragmented intelligence
VMS Systems
MRCC Systems
Port Control
Customs Systems
Click the buttons above to see the transformation
Immediate deployment, EU-hosted infrastructure
Air-gapped environments, sovereign data control
Classified workloads on-prem, unclassified in cloud
Joint task forces, cross-agency operations
The simulations you experienced are based on documented incidents where fragmented systems contributed to preventable outcomes. The technology to prevent the next incident exists. The question is whether European maritime authorities will have access to it.
2,452 lives lost in 2024. €9.4 billion in sanctions evaded. The data to prevent both existed in separate systems that couldn't connect. Argus CGANS is the connection.