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Industry workshop and short course: Future Models for Energy and Water Management

AMSIMASCOSunesco

 

Overview

The event held at Queensland University of Technology, was a great success as it attracted in excess of 60 participants from industry, academia and government from many different countries.

Feedback received regarding the dinner on the Tuesday night showed that it is an important opportunity for participants to network with each other and establish connections within energy and water sectors.

Topics addressed included, energy and water economy in a regulated environment, renewable energy sources, network modelling and management, risk management, power system stability, network optimisation and demand forecasting.

"The event enabled participants to collectively produce The Brisbane Statement that recommends practical ways UN organisations, governments, international donors, regional and local authorities might seek to address the challenges associated with water and energy crisis by further investing in mathematical sciences."

 

Shahbaz Khan, UNESCO 2009

 

The program including abstracts is available  .

A statement overview is also available.

Presentations

Presentations given by the speakers are now available, and more files will be put up as we receive them.

  • Mukand Babel pdf_button
  • Nicola Falcon pdf_button
  • Matthew Fernandes pdf_button
  • Steven Kenway pdf_button
  • Sead Pasalic pdf_button
  • Andrew Plumridge pdf_button
  • Awadhesh Prasad pdf_button
  • Z. Fuat Toprak pdf_button Paper
  • Graham Weir Part 1 pdf_button, Part 2 pdf_button, Part 3 pdf_button
  • Aftab Ahmad
  • David Swift
  • Elliot Tonkes part 1 , Part 2 , Part 3
  • Federico Rossi
  • Mike O'Sullivan
  • Milton Woods
  • Rahmah Elfithri
  • Roslinazairimah Zakaria
  • Yufeng Luo
  • Jacques Ganoulis
  • Ray Volker
  • Kirsi Mäkinen
  • Long Duc Nghiem
  • YunChen

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Aftab Ahmad
Aftab Ahmad
Andrew Plumridge
Awadhesh Prasad
Awadhesh Prasad
Awadhesh Prasad
Participants
Participants
David Swift
David Swift
David Swift
Debborah Marsh
Debborah Marsh
Dimetre Triadis
Federico Rossi
Federico Rossi
Ian Rose
Ian Rose
Jacques Ganoulis
Long Nghiem
Long Nghiem
Luo Yufeng
Luo Yufeng
Michael O'Sullivan, Shahbaz Khan
Milton Woods
Mukand S Babel
Mukand S Babel
Mukand S Babel
Mukand S Babel
Nicola Falcon
Nicola Falcon
Nicola Falcon
Phil Broadbridge
Phil Broadbridge
Rahmah Elfithri
Rahmah Elfithri
Rahmah Elfithri
Rahmah Elfithri
Ray Volker
Ray Volker
Roslinazairimah Zakaria
Roslinazairimah Zakaria
Roslinazairimah Zakaria
Sead Pasalic
Sead Pasalic
Shahbaz Khan
Shahbaz Khan
Shahbaz Khan
Shahbaz Khan
Shahbaz Khan
Shahbaz Khan
Shahbaz Khan
Shahbaz Khan
Shahbaz Khan
Shahbaz Khan
Steven Kenway
Steven Kenway
Yun Chen
Yun Chen
Z. Fuat Toprak
Pre dinner drinks
Dimetre Triadis, Tom, Mike O'Sullivan, Ian Rose, Matthew Fernandes

Organising and Advisory Committee

Prof. Phil Broadbridge, AMSI
Assoc. Prof. John Boland, University of South Australia
Dr Peter Coppin, CSIRO
Prof. Tony Guttmann, MASCOS
Dr Tom Montague, AMSI.
Dr Ian Rose, ROAM Consulting
Prof. Shahbaz Khan, UNESCO
Dr Elliot Tonkes, Energy Edge
Prof. Ian Turner, Queensland University of Technology

Media coverage

Interview about the event with Prof. Phil Broadbridge in the Westender.

 

QUTroamMITACSenergyedgesmallawa

Program

Monday 20th July
Tuesday 21st July
Wednesday 22rd July
8:45 - 9:00
Registration
Registration
Registration
9:00 - 9:10
Opening by Ray Volker


9:10 - 10:00
Shahbaz Khan
Back to Basics: understanding the water, energy and climate change nexus
Graham Weir
Renewable Geothermal Energy - Regional Models
Elliot Tonkes
Stochastic dynamic programming in electricity and water markets
10:05 - 10:55
Elliot Tonkes
Stochastic models for physical and financial modelling in electricity and water
Shahbaz Khan
Mathematics to untangle quadruple "water, climate, food and economic" crisis
Graham Weir
Renewable Geothermal Energy - Geysers, Geothermal fields, Crustal Models
11:00 - 11:20
Morning Break
11:25 - 12:15
Graham Weir
Renewable Geothermal Energy - Introduction
Elliot Tonkes
The connection between electricity and water supply, demand and markets
Shahbaz Khan
To suicide or survive - predicting world's water energy and climate futures
12:15 - 13:00
Ian Rose
Long Range Electricity Market Modelling under the Influence of Carbon Pricing and Renewable Energy Targets
Mukand S Babel
Modeling Water Energy and Environmental Tradeoffs
David Swift
Sophisticated solutions to simple problems
13:00 - 14:00
Lunch
14:00 - 14:25
Z. Fuat Toprak
Flow Discharge Modeling In Open Canals By Fuzzy Logic
Michael O'Sullivan
State-of-the-art of geothermal modeling
Jacques Ganoulis
Modelling Water Energy Futures in a Transboundary Environment
14:25 - 14:50
Sead Pasalic
Simulation Models for Integrating Wind Generation into the Tasmanian Power System
14:50 - 15:15
Milton Woods
Development of a Wind Farm Simulator
Aftab Ahmad
Water and Energy in irrigation systems modernization
Roslinazairimah Zakaria
Parameters estimation of two correlated mixed gamma model using maximum likelihood estimation method
15:15 - 15:40
Andrew Plumridge
Rainfall-Runoff Models of the Upper-Murray Basin
Long Duc Nghiem
Integrated Energy-Water Systems: The role of membrane technology
Awadhesh Prasad
Role of models in water and environmental regulation in the Murray-Darling Basin
15:40 - 16:00
Afternoon tea
16:00 - 16:25
Luo Yufeng
System dynamics modelling of water and salt balance of Bosten Lake in northwest China: implications for sustainable management
Matthew Fernandes
A penalty minimisation water allocation model for regional water supply system
Debborah Marsh
Long term water-energy scenario modelling for New South Wales
16:25 - 16:50
Rahman Elfithri
Data mining for water and energy management
Steven Kenway
Modelling analyses of urban water and energy futures
Kirsi Mäkinen
Harmonising local, national and global plans for reasonable consideration of Greenhouse Gas emissions from reservoirs
16:50 - 17:15
Nicola Falcon
Electricity market modelling in an environment of change and uncertainty
Federico Rossi
Role of the Earth's Albedo in reducing Global Warming
Yun Chen
3D Visualisation for Water and Energy Future

Biographies

 

 

Professor Shahbaz Khan

Shahbaz is currently Chief of Section on Sustainable Water Resources Development and Management. His key leadership and management areas at UNESCO include the Water Education for Sustainable Development, Hydrology for Environment, Life and Policy (HELP), Ecohydrology, Water and Ethics and Water, Energy and Food Nexus.

He was previously Professor of Hydrology and Director of the International Centre of Water at the Charles Sturt University, Australia and Research Leader/Director of Irrigated Systems and Rural Water Use areas of CSIRO, Australia. Shahbaz has received world recognition dealing with a range of issues in land use management, surface and groundwater hydrology and has developed mathematical models of groundwater flow and contaminant transport, surface-groundwater interactions, tile drainage, flood forecasting and storm drainage.

Shahbazs innovative science contribution and vision in water management has been widely recognised, for example through the receipt of Australian Eureka Award, CSIRO Medal, Charles Sturt Universitys Vice Chancellors Research Excellence Award 2006, CLW 2004, Partner or Perish Award, 2005 winning team Research Director, 2005 CSIRO Environmental Prize, CSIRO Land and Water (CLW) Division Year 2000 Exceptional Achievements Award.
Professor Shahbaz Khan

 

 

Dr Elliot Tonkes

Elliot is the Director of Risk and Analytics at Energy Edge Pty Ltd which offers trading and financial risk management services in commodity markets including water, carbon and electricity.
Energy Edge provides services on derivative pricing methods, quantitative risk assessment, trading strategies, portfolio optimisation, corporate risk policy frameworks and the installation of software to undertake these activities.
Elliot was previously the chief analyst at a major diversified electricity generator and prior to that spent five years in academia.
He holds degrees in mechanical engineering and science and a PhD in mathematics from the University of Queensland. His research interests cover partial differential equations, dynamic programming and applications in fields as diverse as energy markets and sports science.

Dr. Elliot Tonkes

 

 

Dr Ian Rose

Ian is Managing Director of ROAM Consulting, which is a specialist Energy Modelling company serving more than fifty clients including NEM Generators and Retailers, Transmission Corporations, and NEMMCO. ROAM Consulting also conducts modelling of Western Australia, New Zealand and California markets.
ROAM Consulting employs 12 staff with mathematics, engineering, commerce and IT qualifications.
He worked for 33 years in the Queensland Electricity Supply Industry on a range of activities that included transmission, generation and system operations, until forming ROAM Consulting in 2000.
His extensive experience in Australia, Canada and the USA has included electricity network modelling, software development and application, power flow, loss factor analysis, linear and dynamic programming.
He completed his M. Eng. Sc. at the University of Queensland in 1973 and his PhD University of Waterloo, Canada in 1977. He is a Member of IEEE (since 1974), Fellow IEAust (member since 1978). Ian is a representative on CIGRE Australian Panel, Markets and Regulation.

Dr Ian Rose

 

 

Dr Graham Weir

Graham has been Team Manager of the Applied Mathematics Team in Industrial Research Ltd (IRL), Lower Hutt, New Zealand for 16 years. IRL is a government owned company of about 300 scientists.
The majority of the commercial work done by the Applied Maths team concerns porous media flow, especially geothermal modelling, and historically some petroleum and irrigation modelling. The geothermal modelling concerns all aspects from modelling surface features, well testing, field assessment, chemical transport and deposition, reinjection, and the development of regional models of geothermal regions.
Graham's special interests in geothermal include modelling geyser behaviour, developing the theory for two phase flow in boiling regions of geothermal fields, and constructing large-scale models of geothermal field behaviour.
He is also interested in plastic behaviour of materials, both at the macroscopic and nano-scales.
Graham has a DSc from the University of Canterbury, is a Fellow of the Royal Society of New Zealand, a Life Member of AIChE, and belongs to several applied mathematics bodies.

Dr Graham Weir

 

Professor Michael O'Sullivan

Mike is a Professor in Engineering Science at the University of Auckland. He is interested in computational fluid dynamics applied to environmental fluids problems and specialises in modeling the behaviour of geothermal reservoirs. He acts as a consultant for Contact Energy Ltd. on modeling Wairakei and Ohaaki geothermal fields and for Mighty River Power Ltd. on modeling Mokai.
He has worked with PB Power on geothermal projects in Indonesia, Japan, Kenya, Mexico and USA. His secondary research interests are in modeling tidal flows and the dispersion of pollutants in rivers and estuaries, coal-bed methane extraction and carbon dioxide sequestration.
He holds degrees in Civil Engineering and Mathematics from the University of Auckland and a PhD in Applied Mechanics from California Institute of Technology. He is a Fellow of IPENZ.

Professor Michael O'Sullivan

 

Dr Mukand S. Babel

Mukand is an Associate Professor and Coordinator of Water Engineering and Management program at the Asian Institute of Technology (AIT), Thailand. He also leads the Regional Center of the UN Water Virtual Learning Center, which offers an e-learning diploma course on Integrated Water Resources Management (IWRM), the first of such kind in Asia.
Dr. Babel's professional experience in teaching, research and consultancy spans over 25 years in India, Thailand and Vietnam.
With doctorate in water resources engineering, his current research emphasis is on hydrologic and water resources modeling as applied to IWRM.
He currently leads interdisciplinary research relating hydrology and water resources with economic, environmental and socio-economic aspects of water to address diverse water problems and issues in Asia.
Dr Babel has carried out several capacity development, research, and sponsored projects in collaboration with international agencies/organizations such as Danida, UNEP, ADB, UNESCO, UNU, IGES, APN and universities in Japan, South Korea and USA.

Dr. Mukand S. Babel

 

David Swift

David is the Chief Executive of the Electricity Supply Industry Planning Council of South Australia. The ESIPC provides an expert, independent source of advice to the Energy Minister and the industry regulator (ESCOSA) in South Australia in relation to the State's electricity industry. It also has an oversight role in the development of the power system and undertakes certain planning responsibilities.
David joined the Planning Council in June 2004 after four years in the National Electricity Code Administrator (NECA) as the Associate Director responsible for market development. In that role David led a number of major reviews of the national market rules including reviews of technical standards, ancillary services, transmission pricing and regional pricing.
David has an ongoing interest in the operation and development of energy markets and the likely impacts on those markets of profound industry change.
David has worked in the electricity industry for many years and in 2006 David was appointed by the Council of Australian Governments to an expert panel responsible which recommended further reform of Australia's energy sector. Those reforms are now being implemented.

David Swift

Jacques Ganoulis

Jacques Ganoulis is a Professor of Civil Engineering at the Aristotle University of Thessaloniki (Greece). He holds a PhD (Doctorat dEtat) from the University of Toulouse (France) and has been a visiting scholar at the Universities of Erlangen (Germany), McGill (Canada), Melbourne (Australia), and Paris VI, (France).
He is an internationally well-known expert on groundwater and surface water resources management and the director of the UNESCO Chair/International Network of Water-Environment Centres for the Balkans (INWEB) on sustainable management of water and conflict resolution. The UNESCO Chair/INWEB is a network of academic and non-academic institutions from the 10 Balkan countries, which concentrates mainly on transboundary water issues and cooperates closely with UNESCOs International Hydrological Programme.
Prof. Ganouliss research interests mainly include engineering risk analysis, fuzzy ecological modelling, floodplain management, marine pollution and coastal circulation, as well as the integrated management of internationally shared water resources. He has published more than 180 papers in scientific journals and conference proceedings, is the editor of 10 books including Transboundary Water Resources Management: Institutional and Engineering Approaches (SPRINGER, 1996) and is the author of the book Risk Analysis of Water Pollution (WILEY-VCH, 1994; 2nd edition, 2009; translated in Chinese).

Jacques_Ganoulis

 

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