British Dam Society
The BDS covers the technical aspects of dams and reservoirs, including planning, design, construction, maintenance, safety, and environmental impact.
There has been much talk in recent times about the need to adopt a sustainable approach in every area of our lives. So what is behind the drive to sustainability? According to the United Nations (2019) there is estimated to be over 10 billion people living on the planet by 2100 with the consequent increase in demand for energy and resources. The need to be sustainable will not be a choice but a necessity.
The population explosion within the UK commenced during the 19th century at the start of the Industrial Revolution. Modern Britain was “invented” sometime between 1830 and 1900, coinciding with the height of the dam-building period, driven by industrialisation and the need for a sustainable water supply.
However, with this increasing demand for resources, the Victorians are often cited to be one of the most sustainable generations in UK history, driven by the necessity to reduce, reuse, and recycle. Studying the Victorian period may provoke new ways of thinking about contemporary issues, including the problem of environmental degradation and climate change.
This presentation will look at two examples of recent remedial works, and compare them or original Victorian construction practices to evaluate whether we are being more or less sustainable in our current approach to construction.
The BDS covers the technical aspects of dams and reservoirs, including planning, design, construction, maintenance, safety, and environmental impact.
United Utilities
principal engineer
Pamela is a Fellow and Chartered Civil Engineer and Geologist with a 30+ years’ career involved in water, embankment dams, infrastructure, power, petrochemical and railway projects, both in the UK and overseas. Currently working at United Utilities as a Principal Engineer in the Ground Engineering team.
United Utilities
principal engineer
Andrew is a Fellow of the ICE and Chartered Geologist with a 20+ year career involved in water and infrastructure projects across the UK. Appointed on the Reservoir Supervising Engineer panel since 2016 and currently working at United Utilities as a Principal Engineer in the Ground Engineering team.

We bring you a webinar on The Wales National Travel Survey, launched in March 2025, which collects representative data on how and why people travel in Wales, with early findings to be published in April 2026 and full annual results from Autumn 2026.

Join the July 2026 Engineering Excellence Community Forum online to hear updates on key Safety Risk Advisory Group workstreams, from tackling gaps in the provision of safety risk management guidance to operating specialist professional registers.

To move towards healing, we must first understand what trauma is (and isn’t).