Monday, September 26, 2016
Sabatini Honored with AEESP Award for Global Outreach
The Association of Environmental Engineering and Science Professors (AEESP) selected Dr. David Sabatini, director of the WaTER Center, to receive the 2016 Steven K. Dentel AEESP Award for Global Outreach. Read more in this article in the Norman Transcript.
Tuesday, September 6, 2016
Eric Wood - Modeling Water, Energy and Climate
Eric F. Wood
holds the Susan Dod Brown Professorship in Civil and Environmental Engineering
at Princeton University, where he has taught since 1976. His research
area is in hydroclimatology with an emphasis on the modeling and analysis of the
global water and energy cycles through land surface modeling, satellite remote
sensing, and data analysis. His foci
include the monitoring and forecasting of drought, hydrologic impacts from
climate change, and seasonal hydrological forecasting.
Eric's research has an emphasis on the modeling and analysis of global water and energy. |
Eric was elected to the U.S. National Academy
of Engineering for “For development of land surface models and use of remote
sensing for hydrologic modeling and prediction.” Among his other honors, Dr. Wood received a Doctor Honoris Causa from Gent
University (Belgium) in 2011, the European Geosciences Union’s Alfred Wegener
Medal and John Dalton Medal, AMS’s Jules G. Charney Award and Robert E. Horton
Memorial Lectureship, and AGU's Hydrology Section’s Robert E. Horton
Award. Dr. Wood is a Foreign Fellow of the Australian Academy of Technological
Sciences and Engineering (ATSE), a Fellow of the Royal Society of Canada, the
American Geophysical Union and the American Meteorological Society. He is a former Council member of the American
Meteorological Society. For the American
Geophysical Union, he was the President of the Hydrology Section (2012-2014),
served on the AGU Council (2010-2014) and has served on numerous committees,
including as a member and chair of the Union Fellows Committee.
Dr. Wood serves, and has served, on numerous
advisory panels and committees for NOAA, NASA, NSF and the US National
Academies as well as international programs.
During his academic career he has been the primary advisor to 32 PhD
students, 8 Masters students, and has mentored 27 post-doctoral researchers.
Accurate modeling can help African farmers prepare for periods of drought. |
Sarini Prabasi - Helping the Poorest of the World's Poor
Sarina Prabasi is the
Chief Executive of WaterAid America, the world’s largest international
non-profit dedicated to helping the world’s poorest people gain long-term
access to safe drinking water, toilets and effective hygiene education.
Over the course of the last year, WaterAid and its local partners have
helped two million people gain clean water, three million people gain toilets,
and more than eight million people gain access to hygiene education.
Sarina Prabasi is a "woman of influence" who is helping to change millions of lives by increasing their access to safe drinking water, toilets and hygiene education. |
Prabasi counts more than 20 years of experience in international development work. Prior to
joining WaterAid in 2014, she most recently served as Deputy Chief of Programs
at Orbis International, and as Country Representative at WaterAid Ethiopia.
Prior to that, Sarina spent nearly ten years at Pact Inc., serving both in
Washington, D.C. and overseas.
Originally from Nepal, Prabasi lives in NYC
where she is the Co-Founder of Buunni Coffee, a fair trade, organic coffee
company. We
are pleased to welcome Sarina as one of the jurors to select the
winner of the 2017 OU International Water Prize. As part of the WaTER Center Symposium on September 22, Ms. Prabasi will also be part of a panel discussion on "Critical Water Issues in Today's World".
Friday, September 2, 2016
James Smith - Innovator for Clean Water Solutions
Jim Smith, professor of environmental engineering, works to solve global water and health problems around the globe. |
Mr. Smith is the founder of PureMadi, a not-for-profit
organization working to solve global water and health problems by working at
the interface of water, societal, and human health disciplines. He is also the founder of MadiDrop, PBC and
inventor of the MadiDrop, a silver-ceramic tablet for point-of-use water
disinfection. He was named the Innovator
of the Year by the University Licensing and Ventures group in 2015 for his work
with PureMadi and MadiDrop, PBC.
Jim Smith working in his lab at University of Virginia |
We
are pleased to welcome Jim Smith as one of the jurors to select the
winner of the 2017 OU International Water Prize. As part of the WaTER Center Symposium on September 22, Dr. Smith will also be part of a panel discussion on "Critical Water Issues in Today's World".
Tuesday, August 30, 2016
Afreen Siddiqi - Linkages between Food, Energy, and Water
Dr.
Afreen Siddiqi has joint positions as a Research Scientist at the Massachusetts
Institute of Technology (MIT), and a Visiting Scholar with the Science,
Technology, and Public Policy Program at Harvard Kennedy School. Her
research expertise is at the intersection of engineering, policy, and
international development.
Afreen has a B.S. in Mechanical Engineering, M.S. in Aeronautics and Astronautics, and a Ph.D. in Aerospace Systems, all from MIT. She combines quantitative tools and qualitative methods for complex socio-technical systems analysis. Some of her current research is on the emerging critical linkages between water, energy, and food security at urban, provincial, and national scales in developing countries.
Dr. Siddiqi has worked in an engineering capacity with oil and gas, instrumentation, and aerospace sectors, and currently serves in advisory roles in several international academic and research institutions.
We
are pleased to welcome Afreen Siddiqi as one of the jurors to select the
winner of the 2017 OU International Water Prize. As part of the WaTER Center Symposium on September 22, Dr. Siddiqi will also be part of a panel discussion on "Critical Water Issues in Today's World".
Dr. Afreen Siddiqi was one of the keynote speakers for last year's 2015 International WaTER Conference. |
Afreen has a B.S. in Mechanical Engineering, M.S. in Aeronautics and Astronautics, and a Ph.D. in Aerospace Systems, all from MIT. She combines quantitative tools and qualitative methods for complex socio-technical systems analysis. Some of her current research is on the emerging critical linkages between water, energy, and food security at urban, provincial, and national scales in developing countries.
Water, already necessary to sustain life, is also needed for growing food and producing energy. |
Dr. Siddiqi has worked in an engineering capacity with oil and gas, instrumentation, and aerospace sectors, and currently serves in advisory roles in several international academic and research institutions.
In many countries, water shortages affect quality of life for both children and animals. |
Ned Breslin - WaSH Activist and Entrepreneur
Edward D. (Ned) Breslin has worked as an entrepreneur in the
international WaSH sector for close to 30 years. Joining Water For People as Director of
International Programs in 2006, Ned served as its Chief Executive officer during
the last nine years. In 2011, Breslin
received the Skoll Award for Social Entrepreneurship for his commitment and
proven work with Water For People.
Ned Breslin speaks passionately and honestly about issues of sustainability in WaSH sector. |
Ned discovered the challenges of water and sanitation in
1987 while living in the Chalbi Desert of northern Kenya, through a program
offered by St. Lawrence University.
Before joining Water for People, he worked for a range of local and
international Wash NGOs in South Africa, Zimbabwe and Mozambique, including a
position as Country Representative for WaterAid, Mozambique.
Inspired by family and a passion to serve, Ned has promoted
innovative and culturally sensitive water and sanitation programs. He firmly believes
that responsible intervention efforts demand greater focus on understanding and
accountability of project outcomes so that the lives of everyone affected are
transformed positively and permanently, with sustainability and independence as
the primary goals.
Broken water pump sits idle in Tanzania. |
We are pleased to welcome Ned Breslin as one of the jurors to select the winner of the 2017 OU International Water Prize. As part of the WaTER Center Symposium on September 22, Ned will also be part of a panel discussion on "Critical Water Issues in Today's World".
Friday, August 5, 2016
Summer Travels Prove Productive for WaTER Center and Collaboratives
Dr. David Sabatini and Philip Deal, a PhD student in the
CEES program, traveled to Ghana in the month of July. The purpose of the trip, supported by the Norman Rotary,
was to evaluate ongoing research, meet with local partners, and act as OU
delegates for the annual WEDC Conference.
Access Development managers P. Aratuo and W. Mpeniasah with Sabatini and Deal |
The University of Oklahoma has partnered with the Water4
Foundation to research a new company in Wassa East District, Western Region.
The Ghanaian company is called Access Development Ltd. It aims to provide a
full water delivery service to rural communities in Ghana. They will
manufacture drilling equipment and train professional drilling teams. These
teams will dig and maintain boreholes so that contracted villages will have
clean water available on a consistent basis. By following a for-profit model, they
will charge a miniscule tariff for these services upfront at each water point in
order to recover the costs for service and prevent the breakdown of the Access
Development infrastructure. Dr. Sabatini and Mr. Deal met with the leaders of
this company and discussed Phase 1 of project implementation. Phase 1, which
included preliminary planning, mobilization, and baseline studies, was recently
completed. Phases 2 and 3, which include training and the start of drilling,
will proceed this fall.
Following the visit
to the local office building in western Ghana, Dr. Sabatini and Mr. Deal headed
to Kumasi to attend the 39th WEDC International Conference. Over 400
participants from over 40 countries participated. The University of Oklahoma
presented a poster over the upcoming research. In addition, other cost recovery
methods were compared and discussed, such as borehole banking, WASH insurance,
and cost recovery for operation and maintenance expenses. The present positive
outlook of service delivery models was apparent in the conference
presentations.
OU Poster at the 39th WEDC International Conference |
Safe Water Network water station using a service delivery model |
The
final portion of the trip through Ghana ended in the northern region in a city
named Tamale. Access Development Ltd. has its regional operating center, or
ROC, built in a World Vision compound at this location. The ROC acts as both a
supply chain manager and producer. Skilled technicians are working on a surplus
of pumps, casing, and drilling equipment in preparation for the upcoming work
contracts, as well as providing a manual drilling center for surrounding
countries.
Regional Operating Center in Tamale, Ghana |
Storage of manual drilling equipment |
The University of
Oklahoma will be evaluating Access Development Ltd. from technological,
financial, and behavioral perspectives through 2019. Over the next few years,
metrics such as well performance, maintenance periods, operational costs, water
purchasing rates, and how the socioeconomic framework affects the company’s
success will be tracked to evaluate the sustainability of the project. The
WaTER Center will determine if this is the next step in public-private
partnerships in emerging regions.
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