Big Data & Decision Making: The Future of the Water Space
Published on by Stan Bronson, President & CEO at The Institute for Climate Innovation
The term “big data” has clearly come into the limelight recently as the capacity of organizations that collect water-related data grows at an exponential rate. This conference looks at efforts, both nationally and internationally, to harness the mass of information collected in the water space and convert it to tools useful to make decisions that can efficiently manage systems, especially those that are coastal, that interconnect ecology, water resources and society. The interdisciplinary nature of this conference is intended to engage many areas of expertise as we grapple with mountains of information we are now capable of generating.
Keynote Speakers
Will Sarni, Director and Practice Leader: Water Strategy, Deloitte Consulting |
Steve Bourne, Atkins |
Greg van der Vink , Princeton University and Novametrics |
Agenda
Tuesday, December 8: Ecology and Big Data Speakers
8:00 Registration Opens 9:00 AM Welcome & Introductory Remarks - Jack Payne, VP, University of Florida IFAS 9:15 AM Keynote Address - Will Sarni, Deloitte Consulting. Live streamed at https://youtu.be/ELz0Ss7FVyw 9:45 AM Using Big Data for Ecology - Moderator, Tom Frazer, Director of UF's School for Natural Resources, Speaker, Hank Loescher, Director of Special Projects, National Ecological Observatory Network (NEON). Live streamed at https://youtu.be/ELz0Ss7FVyw 10:45 AM Break 11:00 AM Federal Perspectives on the Big Data Dilemma - Moderator, Ernie Cox, President, Family L;ands Remembered LLC, Gretchen Ehlinger, Acting Chief for Restoration and Recovery, US Army Corps of Engineers 12:00 PM Lunch with Greg van der Vink, Princeton University and Novametrics - What's all this Noise? 1:00 PM The Florida Earth Young Scholars - Integrating Data and Research from a Comprehensive Approach - Kelly Heber Dunning, Woods Hole Institute at MIT and Ann Siders, Woods Institute at Stanford University 2:00 PM Data and US Higher Education, Jay Martin, Director, OSU Global Water Institute, Kirk Hatfield, UF Engineering School for Sustainable Infrastructure & Environment 3:00 PM Breakout Groups with the question of "What do we need?" Wednesday, December 9, Big Data and Water Management 8:00 AM Registration and Coffee 9:00 AM Keynote - Steve Bourne, Atkins - Making Data Fun. Live streamed at https://youtu.be/mqk7UPDizHA 9:30 AM An International Case Study - The Dutch Digital Delta Initiative - Joost De Haan, Delfland Water Authority. Moderated by Stan Bronson, Florida Earth. Live Streamed at https://youtu.be/mqk7UPDizHA 10:30 AM Break 10:45 AM Big Data and Decision Making in Practice - Matahal Ansar, South Florida Water Management; Al Karlin, Southwest Florida Water Management District; Sheri Brandt-Williams, St. Johns River Water Management District 12:00 PM Lunch with Danny Sanchez, Hotfix Earth 1:00 PM Water Data at the City Level - Karl Craig, Senior Systems Analyst, City of Tampa 2:00 PM Breakout Sessions 3:30 PM Adjourn |
Conference Partners and Sponsors
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Information
- Website: http://floridaearth.org/dataconference
- Location: Gainesville, United States
- Starts , ends

design, engineering, and project management consultancies. His climate research, water resources decision support system design, and software development and training are helping to establish resilient cities that can react, recover, adapt, and transform to meet future needs. A key player in Atkins’ Future Proofing Cities initiative, Bourne focuses on helping communities understand their city’s strengths and risks, while building consensus and ownership of solutions. Active in national water resources and GIS communities, Steve also leads cross-disciplinary teams represented by academia, government, and private industry in developing resource management solutions. Steve’s recent projects have focused on reviewing climate change impacts on the arctic, forecasting climate change impact on the 100-year storm in individual communities, enabling residents to design their own stormwater systems, and examining 100-year infrastructure cost forecasting and optimization.
research seminars he taught at Princeton University and was launched with an Innovative Research Award from the Secretary of Defense. He was named Princeton’s 250th Anniversary Professor for Distinguished Teaching in 2000/01 and was awarded the Engineering Council’s Excellence in Teaching Award in 2004. Dr. van der Vink received his Ph.D. in Geosciences from Princeton University. He has been a National Research Council Postdoctoral Fellow, a Congressional Science Fellow, and an International Affairs Fellow of the Council on Foreign Relations. 
























