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Type
Lecture

Adaptation of infrastructure to climate change: the end user’s perspective

Event organised by ICE

Date
20 November 2024
Time
12:00 - 16:30 GMT
Location
Engineers House Conference Venue
The Promenade
Clifton
Bristol, BS8 3NB
United Kingdom

This event has now ended

Overview

Communities, homeowners, passengers, patients, businesses – these are the end users who feel the direct impact if infrastructure fails to cope with climate extremes. Ensuring their needs, concerns, and access to services are prioritised is not just a matter of good design, it is essential for building resilient neighbourhoods that can thrive in a climate-challenged future.

Organisations must consider how infrastructure adaptations affect the affordability and equity of services. Inclusivity in design is also key, ensuring that the benefits of resilient infrastructure are distributed fairly. Public engagement and transparency are crucial in building trust and ensuring that communities understand the reasons behind changes or disruptions during adaptation projects. Additionally, climate-adapted infrastructure must be underpinned with behaviour change to ensure sustainability for the future.

In the third workshop in a series exploring climate adaptation pathways, the South West Infrastructure Partnership (SWIP) will bring together professionals, decision makers and stakeholders from a wide range of sectors.  

The first two workshops looked at the problem from the practitioner's and client's points of view, highlighting many issues that need to be addressed and pointing to practical examples. 

This final workshop will look at the adaptation problem from the end user's perspective. It will explore a diverse range of factors, such as shaping behaviour change, involving end users in the conception, design, and delivery of solutions, and establishing value cases that end users are willing to pay for.

The format of the event will include presentations and case studies to help inform and inspire delegates, combined with breakout discussion groups to share opinions, and expertise. There will also be time for inter-sector networking, where professionals can exchange ideas with those outside their own sphere.

A buffet lunch and refreshments are included. 

There is wheelchair access at the venue via ramps and lifts. Accessible parking is also available on site.

Please note, a photographer will be taking photos throughout the day for ICE South West and SWIP to use on their websites and social media channels. Anyone wishing not to be photographed should email [email protected] before the event.

In partnership with

South West Infrastructure Partnership

South West Infrastructure Partnership

SWIP supports cross-sector collaboration in South West England to help bring a more joined up approach to regional infrastructure.

Programme

12:00 - 12:45
Arrivals and networking with lunch
12:45 - 12:46
Welcome - Miranda Housden, ICE South West regional director
12:46 - 12:55
Introduction & aims - Julie Gregory
12:55 - 13:10
A learning journey approach to behaviour change: attaining five key learning outcomes - Prof. Colin Taylor
13:10 - 13:25
The latest climate adaptation science; communicating science to end-users; frequent misinterpretations and how to avoid them - Prof. Richard Betts
13:25 - 13:40
Why and how to engage communities with net zero and beyond - Dr Christina Demski
13:40 - 13:50
Q&A for all three speakers
13:50 - 13:55
Introduction to breakout session 1 - Prof. Colin Taylor
13:55 - 14:40
Breakout session 1 - Exploring the diversity of end user perspectives and needs
14:45 - 15:00
Reflections on end user perspectives across multiple sectors - Dame Janet Trotter
15:00 - 15:15
What SWIP contributors need to know about the end user perspective when applying adaptation pathways (using River Severn case study) - Peter Von Lany
15:15 - 15:25
Q&A for both speakers
15:25 - 15:35
Feedback from breakout session 1 and introduction to breakout session - Prof. Colin Taylor
15:35 - 16:15
Breakout session 2 - How do we meet the diversity of end user needs?
16:15 - 16:25
How can SWIP support you to develop your own approach? - Prof. Colin Taylor
16:25 - 16:30
Closing remarks - Miranda Housden

Speakers

Professor Richard Betts MBE

Professor Richard Betts MBE

University of Exeter and Met Office Hadley Centre

head of climate impacts research

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Professor Richard Betts MBE

Richard Betts is professor of climate impacts at the University of Exeter and head of climate impacts research at the Met Office Hadley Centre. He is acknowledged as one of the world’s leading climate scientists, with a research career spanning over 30 years. He has published more than 100 scientific papers on a diverse range of topics including numerous aspects of climate change impacts and the role of land ecosystem changes in the Earth system.

Richard was a lead author on the fourth, fifth and sixth assessment reports of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), and technical lead for the UK’s third national climate change risk sssessment (CCRA3).

He is currently serving as expert advisor to the UK’s Climate Change Committee for the fourth risk assessment.

In the 2019 Queen’s Birthday Honours List he was awarded an MBE for services to understanding climate change.

Dr Christina Demski

Dr Christina Demski

University of Bath

Reader in environmental psychology

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Dr Christina Demski

Dr Christina Demski is a reader in environmental psychology at the University of Bath, specialising in research on public perceptions and engagement with climate and energy issues. She is also deputy director of the Centre for Climate Change and Social Transformations (CAST), leading theme one of the research programme, which investigates the feasibility and social desirability of low-carbon futures.

Christina has also researched the design and impact of climate assemblies and has recently completed a secondment with the (former) UK Department for Business, Energy and Industrial Strategy as net zero public engagement advisor.

Julie Gregory

Julie Gregory

Network Rail

head of weather resilience and sustainable growth

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Julie Gregory

After working as meteorologist and climate scientist at the Met Office, Julie moved to Network Rail where she has been for more than 20 years in a variety of roles. She spent five years as senior sponsor for a programme of weather and climate resilience works on the Devon Coast, securing funding for over £160m and seeing four out of five projects into delivery. Julie has worked at a Senior Programme Manager for the Weather/Climate Risk Task Force in Network Rail’s Wales & Western Region where her role was to lead work to make the railway more resilient to extreme weather, both now and in the future. She is continuing this vital work in her role as Network Rail's Head of Weather Resilience and Sustainable Growth. 

Miranda Housden

Miranda Housden

Institution of Civil Engineers

regional director South West

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Miranda Housden

As the South West director at the ICE, Miranda is responsible for raising the profile of civil engineering in the region, maintaining professional standards, encouraging a diverse future workforce and providing leadership and direction to the ICE South West team and more than 6,000 ICE members.

Prior to moving to the South West, she was the ICE director for London and South East England, having previously been the London director for the Royal Institute of British Architects. Miranda has produced a number of films including Engineering the London Underground, Engineering Plymouth and Engineering Happiness for which she was awarded the Institution of Civil Engineers Garth Watson medal.

Alongside her ICE role, Miranda is chief executive officer for the South West Infrastructure Partnership.

Professor Colin Taylor

Professor Colin Taylor

University of Bristol

emeritus professor

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Professor Colin Taylor

Colin is emeritus professor of earthquake engineering at the University of Bristol. He is an ICE policy Fellow for sub-national infrastructure decarbonisation, and is champion of the South West Infrastructure Partnership’s net zero route mapping activities. He has over 40 years' research and practice experience on the impacts of natural hazards on all kinds of infrastructure systems.

Dame Janet Trotter DBE CVO

Dame Janet Trotter DBE CVO

Great Western Railway

advisory board member

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Dame Janet Trotter DBE CVO

Educated in Kent, Janet began her working life as a teacher and then lectured in a range of higher education colleges. She was the founding vice chancellor of the University of Gloucestershire.

She was appointed Lord-Lieutenant of Gloucestershire in 2010, a role she relinquished in 2018. Among other charitable roles she is chair of the Chamwell Centre, a hydrotherapy facility primarily for people with additional needs, and the Coalition for the Wellbeing of Children and Young People in Gloucestershire. 

Janet has a particular interest in building developments as an end user and has been involved in a range if infrastructure projects at the university, in the NHS and at the Chamwell Centre, particularly in relation to accessibility.

She is a member of the advisory board of GWR.

Peter von Lany

Peter von Lany

Jacobs

director

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Peter von Lany

Peter von Lany is a director at Jacobs with responsibilities for climate change adaptation. He is an ICE Fellow  with extensive national and international experience in strategic decision-making relating to water resources planning, flood risk management and climate change adaptation. 

Peter is currently involved in a pilot project for the UK Environment Agency to develop and test a framework for applying adaptation pathways to help plan responses to long-term flood and erosion risks at a regional scale. He also advises water utilities on embedding adaptation to climate change within their water resources and investment plans.

He contributed to the peer review of the third UK National Climate Change Risk Assessment (CCRA3). In 2018, he developed a set of outline adaptation pathways to help explore strategic policies for flood and erosion management in the face of climate change at selected UK coastal sites. 

Peter chairs the Climate Change Adaptation panel at the British Standards Institution. He helped draft a British Standard (BS 8631:2021) on the application of adaptation pathways within adaptive planning for climate change, having earlier contributed to the drafting of ISO 14090:2019 on climate change adaptation.