Most superyachts make headlines for who owns them, where they’re anchored or how much they cost. And, in fairness, REV Ocean is best known for her size—at 639.4 feet, she’s overthrown Azzam as the world’s largest superyacht. But what really sets this vessel apart is what she was built for.
The team behind REV Ocean have offered an exclusive sneak peek at her inaugural voyage; a 10-mission science program spanning the Atlantic, Caribbean and Pacific, with full details to be unveiled at the UN Ocean Decade Conference in Rio de Janeiro in April 2027.
Few research vessels arrive with the design pedigree of a superyacht. We have Espen Øino and H2 Yacht Design to thank for that. Fewer still come equipped with a submarine hangar, an onboard metal shop and 3D printing facility—infrastructure more commonly associated with government-funded scientific ships—alongside plans to host documentary crews from Disney and Netflix.
So, how will REV Ocean’s incredible capability be put to work?
A 10-Mission Research Program
Following her launch in Brazil next year, REV Ocean‘s maiden voyage will support 10 scientific missions across 18 months, with each expedition designed around a common goal: generating the scientific evidence needed to accelerate marine conservation efforts.
Speaking during the unveiling, REV Ocean Science Director Eva Ramirez-Llodra said the program had arrived at a “pivotal moment” for global ocean conservation. Governments are committing to ambitious conservation goals, she explained, including the protection of 30% of the planet by 2030 under the Global Biodiversity Framework—but the scientific data needed to validate these protection targets has been left wanting.
“We cannot protect what we don’t know,” she said. “REV Ocean‘s role is to help close that knowledge gap while connecting science with policy, decision-making and regional priorities.”
Exploring Some Of The Ocean’s Least-Known Ecosystems
Among the first missions scheduled is an expedition to Brazil’s Vitória-Trindade Chain, a vast underwater mountain system stretching roughly 2,000 kilometers into the Atlantic Ocean. According to mission lead Professor Jose Angel Alvarez Perez, the region represents one of the most scientifically intriguing marine environments in the South Atlantic.
“It’s basically a whole, interconnected line of seamounts—underwater volcanoes—each with different ages, shapes and depths that add variability to deep-sea fauna,” Perez explained. “This expedition gives us the opportunity to finally understand what lives in these vast, largely mysterious habitats.”
Another flagship component of the maiden voyage will focus on the Caribbean Biodiversity Corridor, a multinational conservation initiative involving Cuba, Jamaica, Haiti and the Dominican Republic. Researchers will investigate the region’s complex underwater landscape—grooved with deep trenches and underwater mountain ranges—that, for all its ecological significance, has remained remarkably unexplored.
“For a long time, conservation work in the Caribbean focused on the shallows,” explained Jonathan Delance, mission lead and Ministry of Environment for the Dominican Republic. “Mangroves, seagrass, coral; these things are critical, but the deep ocean forms the majority of the Caribbean. We need to learn more about it.”
REV Ocean–More Than A Research Vessel
Each expedition will be followed by a week-long port convening, bringing together scientists, policymakers, funders and regional stakeholders while the findings are still fresh. The idea is to shorten the often lengthy gap between data collection and decision-making—researchers may still require years to fully analyze their results, but preliminary findings can immediately inform conversations around a region’s conservation potential and management.
This maiden voyage will also function as a crucial “learning phase” for REV Ocean and her crew. “We’re not only going to be optimizing the vessel, the equipment and the workflows onboard for sampling and data acquisition, but also really testing how REV Ocean functions as an integrated platform,” explained Ramirez-Llodra. “Experts across science, policy development, data sharing, education, communication; they’ll all be onboard, working together towards a common goal.”
Once delivered, REV Ocean is expected to spend around 25% of her operational life chartering with Burgess, with that revenue helping fund her philanthropic lifestyle. But long before the first charter guests step onboard, REV Ocean will be housing scientists as they venture into the least-understood corners (and watery depths) of the globe.
If successful, the program could establish a blueprint for future research missions, and make a tangible difference to ocean conservation policy. That’s a far bigger legacy than simply being the world’s largest superyacht.







