On May 4, 2015, SOS Mediterranee Deutschland e.V. was founded in Berlin on the initiative of captain and historian
Klaus Vogel, after the Italian state rescue mission
Mare Nostrum was terminated. Associations of the same name were formed in France, Italy, and Switzerland. The four associations in the European network SOS Méditerranée reportedly rescued a total of 34,631 people from distress at sea in the central Mediterranean by the end of 2021. In 2016, SOS Mediterranee Deutschland chartered the Gibraltar-flagged
Aquarius and deployed the former German Coast Guard fisheries protection vessel for sea rescue in international waters off the Libyan coast. From 2016 to 2018, the
Aquarius rescued 29,523 people. In 2019, SOS Mediterranee chartered the
Ocean Viking, built in 1986. It is registered as a cargo ship and flies the Norwegian flag. Before its first sea rescue mission, the ship was converted into a rescue vessel. From 2019 to 2022, the
Ocean Viking rescued 5,108 people. The
Humanity 1 was previously used by Sea-Watch under the name
Sea-Watch 4. In July 2022, the ship was prepared in dry dock and rechristened on August 19, 2022, in Vinaròs, Spain. On board the
Humanity 1 for each mission is an international crew of 28 people, some of whom are permanent employees and others are made up of a group of volunteers and an external person for media coverage. In total, 855 people were rescued on the
Humanity 1 in 2022. According to the aid organization, the missions are being hampered by a decree passed by the Italian government in January 2023, which was converted into Law 15/2023 in February 2023. Among other things, the law stipulates that after an initial rescue, aid organizations' ships must immediately head for a specific port assigned to them without being able to provide assistance to other boats. In addition, since December 2022, NGOs' ships have been assigned distant ports for disembarkation, which reduces the proportion of their time available to be spent in the area of operations and allows fewer rescues to take place. In 2026, SOS Humanity propose to bring a second vessel into service, the
Humanity 2; as of January 2026, the
ketch is being converted for use on rescue missions in
Syracuse, Italy. ==Funding==