You're talking about OOI, the Ocean Observing Initiative
http://www.oceanobservatories.org
Yes, we've been involved with OOI since day 1, primarily in a planning and consulting role. We're not one of the primary contractees. Now we're mostly working with UCSD and the San Diego Supercomputing Center on the CyberInfrastructure (CI) portion of the project.
Pretty much, if you're in oceanography, you're going to be involved with OOI somehow. Almost all of NSF (National Science Foundation) funding for oceanography has been directed to OOI.
There are 4 main pieces of OOI -
CI - CyberInfrastructure. Program management by UCSD.
CGSN - Coastal/Global Sensing Network. Program management primarily by Woods Hole, but also Oregon State and Scripps in San Diego.
RSN - Regional Sensing Network (the big cabled observatory being put in place off Oregon, Washington, and British Columbia). Program management by U of Washington.
Education - Program management by Rutgers
While the main awards of 10s of millions goes to the Program management organizations noted, they're subcontracting major portions to lots of other Universities and oceanographic institutes. We're getting a tiny slice of the pie; but our organization is motivated primarily by being involved with the other major institutes, not by the relatively small number of dollars that we're getting from it.
Oops, was that more than you wanted to know?
-Bob
ETA (I couldn't resist) - While we've done some pioneering work on AUVs (Autonomous Underwater Vehicles), we're not involved in the glider portion of OOI. But that's just a small portion of OOI. However, our
MARS cabled observatory in Monterey Bay was funded by NSF as the official prototype for the RSN (cabled observatory) portion of OOI. We and the rest of the organizations learned some valuable lessons before deploying the full-scale network off the west coast. I'm responsible for the software in two of the six experiments cited on our MARS page.