Genesis
Inspired by the post-Cold War easing of archival restrictions, investigators from Belgium, France, Italy, the Netherlands, Sweden, and the United Kingdom convened informally in 1989. Their shared frustration concerned fragmented case archives and duplicate field efforts. In 1990 they formalised a cooperation charter under the working name European UFO Network, later shortened to EuroUFO — a voluntary association without legal personality that relies on the statutes of its member societies.1
Mission and policy
The network pursues three goals. First, standardise sighting data so national catalogues remain interoperable. Second, apply peer-reviewed methodology drawn from astronomy, atmospheric physics, and psychology. Third, maintain a public point of contact that redirects witnesses to qualified local teams while discouraging sensationalism. All resolutions require consensus of the national coordinators, reflecting the network's decentralised ethos.
Membership and governance
Current full members include COBEPS (Belgium), CNEGU (France), CISU (Italy), UFO-Nederland (Netherlands), SUFOI (Denmark), UFO-Sverige (Sweden), and BUFORA (United Kingdom). Observers from GEIPAN and the Italian Air Force attend technical sessions but hold no vote. The rotating secretariat, presently lodged in Bologna, compiles the annual European UAP Barometer that aggregates roughly 4,400 reports each year for the period 2019-2023.2
Information infrastructure
A secure Mattermost instance and the EuroUFO mailing list carry raw case data, spectral analyses, and astronomical overlays. A PostgreSQL schema based on the Hynek-Vallee classification underpins the shared catalogue, while a public-facing dashboard presents anonymised statistics. Since 2021 the group has archived mirror copies of endangered private collections within the AFU digitisation programme.
Conferences and publications
Biennial colloquia alternate between member states; papers undergo double-blind review before appearing in the proceedings series European Journal of UAP Studies. Workshops have addressed photogrammetric calibration, social media misinformation, and the impact of Starlink satellite trains on misidentification rates. Outreach articles appear in multiple languages to respect Europe's linguistic diversity.
Role within global ufology
EuroUFO offers an interlocutor for organizations such as MUFON, CUFOS, and academic anomaly labs, providing vetted European datasets that meet reproducibility standards. The network's emphasis on methodological rigour has encouraged mainstream scientists to contribute optical-tracking instruments to field campaigns, notably during the Hessdalen winter field sessions.
Obstacles
Budgetary limits, uneven data-protection regimes, and the retirement of first-generation researchers threaten continuity. The secretariat prioritises mentorship and the adoption of open-source automation to mitigate volunteer fatigue.
Outlook
Planned initiatives include a machine-learning pilot that flags satellite entries in real time and a micro-grant scheme funding student theses on historical European flap waves. By reinforcing transparent practices, the European UFO Network aims to keep continental research credible amid growing governmental interest in UAP.