The complex Cu II (Py 3 P) (1) is an electrocatalyst for water oxidation to dioxygen in H 2 PO 4 À /HPO 4 2À buffered aqueous solutions. Controlled potential electrolysis experiments with 1 at pH 8.0 at an applied potential of 1.40 V versus the normal hydrogen electrode resulted in the formation of dioxygen (84 % Faradaic yield) through multiple catalyst turnovers with minimal catalyst deactivation. The results of an electrochemical kinetics study point to a single-site mechanism for water oxidation catalysis with involvement of phosphate buffer anions either through atom-proton transfer in a rate-limiting OÀO bond-forming step with HPO 4 2À as the acceptor base or by concerted electron-proton transfer with electron transfer to the electrode and proton transfer to the HPO 4 2À base.The oxidation of water to dioxygen is a key half-reaction in natural photosynthesis and a considerable challenge for artificial photosynthetic schemes aimed at converting solar energy into fuels for energy conversion and storage. Microscopically, water oxidation is necessarily complex since it involves the loss of four electrons and four protons with formation of an OÀO bond (2 H 2 O!O 2 + 4 H + + 4 e À , E 0 = 1.23 V vs. NHE, E pH 7 = 0.82 V vs. normal hydrogen electrode, NHE). Considerable progress has been made in catalyzing this reaction by using transition-metal complexes. Examples of Ru, [1] Ir, [2] Fe, [3] Co, [4] and Mn [5] complexes have been identified as single-site or multi-site catalysts in solution or immobilized on metal-oxide surfaces, or as precursors to catalytically active metal oxides or films. Practical strategies for light-driven water oxidation in solar fuel applications require robust and selective catalysts that react at appreciable rates at low overpotentials and do not compete for light absorption with an integrated chromophore or chromophore antenna. Molecular catalysts are particularly attractive in these applications since their catalytic properties can be relatively fine-tuned by systematic structural and electronic modifications, and strategies are available for incorporating them into chromophore-catalyst assemblies.A few recent reports have documented the first examples of Cu II -mediated water oxidation electrocatalysis with simple Cu II complexes or salts. [6] Cu II water oxidation catalysis is appealing since Cu is biologically relevant and abundant with a well-defined coordination chemistry.Here we report that the monomeric Cu II complex Cu II -(Py 3 P) (1, Py 3 P is N,N-bis(2-(2-pyridyl)ethyl)pyridine-2,6dicarboxamidate, Figure 1) is a stable water oxidation electrocatalyst in H 2 PO 4 À /HPO 4 2À buffered solutions. A combination of cyclic voltammetry and controlled-potential electrolysis (CPE) measurements provide experimental evidence for a single-site water oxidation mechanism involving either rate-determining atom-proton transfer or concerted electronproton transfer leading to rapid water oxidation through multiple catalytic turnovers.The electrochemical properties of 1 were explored by CV m...