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www.floodrisk.org.uk EPSRC Grant: EP/FP202511/1
International workshop to discuss the science of asset management
9th December 2011, Brunei Gallery, School of Oriental and Africa studies (SOAS), Uni. Of London
Hosted byPaul Sayers, Research lead – Infrastructure Management, FRMRC I and II
Geoff Baxter, Research theme leader, Sustainable Asset Management, Environment Agency
Welcome
• Health and Safety• Mobile phones• Agenda and arrangements for the day
Attendees Invitation only - see separate listing
Time Item
08:30 Sign in and morning coffee/tea
09:00 Welcome and scene setting
Challenges of infrastructure management - Paul Sayers
09:10 Session 1: Condition assessment
1. The emerging use of sensors in European dikes - Andre Koelewijn 2. The application of Probabilistic Maintenance for Dutch Storm Surge Barriers - Johan van
den Bogaard 3. Emerging Issues in Managing River Sediments, Flood Risks and Habitats – Colin Thorne Discussion
10:15 Coffee
10:45 Session 2: Single asset performance
1. An overview of current options, practice and future direction for predicting breach formation - Mark Morris
2. Breach erosion and growth: research experience and model development - Greg Hanson 3. Reliability of linear structures (levees) - Latest advances and challenges from a European
perspective - Marie Nauli 4. USACE Levee Safety Risk Analysis: Process and Methodology Overview – Jason Needham Discussion
12:30 Lunch
13:15 Session 3: System analysis and Decision making
1. Optimisation of flood risk management strategies - Michelle Woodward 2. Levee System Performance Using Future Risk Assessment Tools - Mike Deering 3. Decision making under uncertainty for adaptation of flood defence systems - Jim Hall Discussion
14:30 Tea
14:45 Session 3 (continued)
1. Performance modelling and optimisation for urban drainage asset management - Dragan Savic
2. The application of Probabilistic Asset Management (PAM) in the Netherlands - Johan van den Bogaard
3. Long term investment planning - Developing practical strategic investment planning tools - Paul Sayers
Discussion
16:00 Session 4 - Review of research challenges and direction
1. Research gaps - Led by Paul Sayers/Geoff Baxter 2. Next steps and actions
16:30 End
www.floodrisk.org.uk EPSRC Grant: EP/FP202511/1
The challenge of infrastructure management: Scene setting
Paul Sayers and Geoff BaxterInternational workshop to discuss the science of asset
management
9th December 2011
A world wide challenge
Effective and efficient infrastructure management presents many problems:
– Flood control systems are complex combinations of levees, pumps, dams, channels etc
– Future change – climate, deterioration and land use influence risk
– Budgets are limited – requiring prioritisation and is required($2.2 trillion to fix, US – Steve Stockton, £20 billion sunk investment, England and Wales)
Some difficult science questions….
Perform under load or on demand?
Improve or deteriorate
with/without action?
How will an asset…
Perform now and in the
future?Which assets
contribute most to risk?
How will the system...
Hot spots?Investment
need?How might
these change ?
What are the national…
A range of spatial and temporal scales of interest
www.floodrisk.org.uk EPSRC Grant: EP/FP202511/1
The research reported in this presentation was conducted as part of the Flood Risk Management Research Consortium with support from the:
Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council Department of Environment, Food and Rural Affairs/Environment Agency Joint Research Programme United Kingdom Water Industry ResearchOffice of Public Works DublinNorthern Ireland Rivers Agency
Data were provided by the EA and the Ordnance Survey.
Funders
Further information
See the Websitewww.floodrisk.org.uk
ContactsPaul [email protected]
Geoff [email protected]
Today’s workshop has been part funded by the Defra EA Flood and Coastal Erosion Risk Management R&D Programme
More information about the programme, and copies of past R&D work, can be found at http://evidence.environment-agency.gov.uk/FCERM