Persistent SARS-CoV-2 transmission, ongoing mpox outbreaks, and the continued spread of endemic diseases such as typhoid fever and cholera underscore the urgent need for global, multiomics surveillance. In this Personal View, we present Project ODIN, a consortium of European and African partners launched in 2023 that aims to meet this challenge by deploying innovative systems for near real-time pathogen detection and actionable public health insights. The project is a collaboration between high-income and low-income countries in northern Europe and sub-Saharan Africa. Focusing on low-income and middle-income countries, ODIN integrates metagenomics with mobile laboratory systems for comprehensive pathogen monitoring across diverse environments. ODIN emphasises standardised sampling, bioinformatics pipelines, and data-sharing protocols to ensure reliable, interoperable results while addressing infrastructure and resource limitations. By bridging gaps in genomic surveillance, these initiatives seek to strengthen outbreak preparedness, improve pathogen detection, monitor antimicrobial resistance, and provide a holistic approach to One Health challenges. Together, these innovations could advance global surveillance capacity-particularly in under-resourced regions-paving the way for effective disease control and evidence-based policy making.