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Network for Industrially Co-ordinated Sustainable Land Management in Europe
15 - 16 November 2018 Mshed, Bristol, UK.
NICOLE fall workshop 2018 BristolData & RiskOwnership of dataData collection and use in risk assessmentData VisualizationData & SustainabilityData management in order to reduce risks
Workshop Program
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Network for Industrially Co-ordinated Sustainable Land Management in Europe
Nicholas Tymko (Chair) HoneywellLucia Buvé UmicoreRick Parkman AecomPhil Crowcroft ERMRob Sweeney CL:AIREGary Wealthall Geosyntec Consultants, IncPaul Nathanail Land Quality Management LtdHans Slenders Arcadis
Matt Logan WOODJannik Stephanus EarthsoftDan Alexander EarthsoftVera Langer WSPLucy Thomas RSKJack Shore RegenesisMatthew Pannett RambollWillem Havermans Stantec B.V.
NICOLE Organizing Committee
For further information on NICOLE membership, workshop programs, registration & fees, or any other practical issue regarding the conference, please contact: Nan Su (Dutch Sino Business Promotions)P.O. Box 28249 – 3003 KE Rotterdam, The NetherlandsPhone: +31 (10) 310 0829E-mail: [email protected]
Venues
NICOLE Secretariat
Registration
Fees
Working group & workshop
Workshop dinner
Please complete the conference registration form, available online through NICOLE.org and/or the NICOLE secretariat. Deadline for registration: 2 November 2018.
Participation in the NICOLE workshop 2018 is free of charge for NICOLE members and conference speakers. Information on admission fees for other participants can be obtained through the NICOLE secretariat.
MshedPrinces Wharf, Wapping RdBristol, BS1 4RN, UK Bristol City Museum and Art GalleryQueens Rd Bristol, BS8 1RL, UK
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Network for Industrially Co-ordinated Sustainable Land Management in Europe
Thursday 15 November 2018Workshop Day 1
08:30 - 09:00
09:00 - 09:20
09:20 - 09:40
09:40 - 10:00
10:00 - 10:20
10:20 - 10:30
10:30 - 10:50
10:50 - 11:10
11:10 - 11:30
11:30 - 11:50
Registration
Opening session - Chair: [name]
Opening & welcomeJohan de Fraye – NICOLE ChairNicholas Tymko – Workshop Chair
Working Group leaders Working Group update
Pascal Mallien - BakerMcKenzie Data management - A legal perspective
TBC - European Environment Agency Session title tbc
Poster pitches (5x 1-minute presentations)TBC[Name] - [company][Name] - [company][Name] - [company][Name] - [company][Name] - [company]
Coffee break
Session 1 Data Visualization - Chair: [name]
Cameron Orr - Ramboll Interactive digital reports
Benjamin Wood - British Geological SurveyJudith Nathanail – Land Quality Management Ltd Groundhog Professional – a new tool for creating conceptual site models to support redevelopment of brownfields
Willem Havermans - Stantec Using data visualization techniques to better understand the ‘black box’
Continues on next page >>
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Network for Industrially Co-ordinated Sustainable Land Management in Europe
Thursday 15 November 2018Workshop Day 1
11:50 - 12:00
12:00 - 12:15
12:15 - 13:00
13:00 - 13:20
13:20 - 13:40
13:40 - 14:00
14:00 - 14:10
14:10 - 14:20
14:20 - 15:20
Session 1 - continuedData Visualization - Chair: [name]
Q&A
Demonstration pitches (6x 1-minute presentations)TBC [Name] - [company][Name] - [company][Name] - [company][Name] - [company] [Name] - [company][Name] - [company]
Lunch break
Session 2Data collection and application in risk assessent - Chair: [name]
Arthur Coevert - StantecThe Soil Risk Map: A data-driven soil contamination risk assessment method
Patrick Norwood - RSKIntegration and Use of Varied Datasets to Improve Site Assessment and Characterisation
Andrey Korchevskiy - Chemistry & Industrial Hygiene, Inc.Using Monte Carlo simulation for asbestos risk assessment and management purposes
Q&A Poster pitches (5x 1-minute presentations)TBC [Name] - [company][Name] - [company][Name] - [company][Name] - [company] [Name] - [company]
Break & demonstration sessions @booth area
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Network for Industrially Co-ordinated Sustainable Land Management in Europe
15:20 - 15:40
15:40 - 16:00
16:00 - 16:20
16:20 - 16:30
16:30 - 16:50
16:50 - 17:10
17:10 - 17:30
17:30 - 17:50
17:50 - 18:00
18:00 - 18:20
18:20 - 19:25
19:25 - 00:00
Session 3Data management approaches - Chair: [name]
Richard Brinkworth - Leap Environmental Ltd.Land Remediation and the digital Superhighway
Niels Ploug - Kruger VeoliaData is a tool to navigate! The faster you go the more rapidly you need your data streams to be available
James Rayner - GeosyntecBig Data: Applications in environmental science and risk evaluation
Q&A
Break
Session 4Data management in order to reduce risks - Chair: [name]
Simon Gibbons - ERMData Science, Managing Risk and Finding Opportunities Stefan Le Roy - WSPLessons from a countywide ‘big’ water-related data interrogation exercise Cathrien Heusinkveld - Bakker - TauwEvaluation, reduction and management of project risks Q&A Closing remarks Day 1
Back to hotel & transfer
Dinner@ Bristol Museum
Thursday 15 November 2018Workshop Day 1
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Network for Industrially Co-ordinated Sustainable Land Management in Europe
Friday 16 November 2018Workshop Day 2
08:30 - 08:50
08:50 - 09:10
09:10 - 09:30
09:30 - 09:40
09:40 - 10:00
10:00 10:20
10:20 10:40
10:40 11:00
11:00 11:10
11:10 - 11:30
11:30 - 14:00
12:15 - 14:15
Session 5Site conceptualisation - Chair: [name]
Matthias Piepenbrink - ERMNew interactive 3-D visualization of historic site data
Nik Dixon - SwecoMore efficient methods of processing visualising, presenting and assessing data
Paolo Ragni - SAIPEMThe Eni Environmental Val d’Agri Database
Q&A
Break & posters
Session 6Data Sharing - Chair: [name]
Ilona Kemeling - TauwDatasharing for a more sustainable environmental industry
Katy Baker - ArcadisBIM in the industrial sector
Frederic Lalbat - EDFAnalysis and prediction of extreme groundwater levels for Hinkley Point C nuclear power station (United Kingdom)
Q&A
Site visit introduction & Closing remarks
Lunch break & demostration sessions @booth area
Demonstration sessions Bus departure to EDF Hinkley C (site visit) Returns via airport at 17:30h, then onto M-shed at 18:00h.
12:15 - 17:30
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Network for Industrially Co-ordinated Sustainable Land Management in Europe
Friday 16 November 2018Site visit information
Hinkley C nuclear power station
The first new nuclear power station to be built in the UK in over 20 years; Hinkley Point C in Somerset will provide low-carbon electricity for around 6 million homes, create thousands of jobs and bring lasting benefits to the UK economy.Marking a significant milestone in the revitalisation of the UK's nuclear power industry, Hinkley Point C will make a major contribution to the UK’s move to reduce carbon emissions. The electricity generated by its two EPR reactors will offset 9 million tonnes of carbon dioxide emissions a year, or 600 million tonnes over its 60-year lifespan.
ERPEPRs (European Pressurised Water Reactors) are a type of Pressurised Water Reactor (PWR). The design of the UK EPRs that will be built at Hinkley Point C represents a major development on previous PWRs, making them amongst the safest and most efficient civil nuclear power generators ever designed.The UK EPR design marks significant progress towards sustainability. It has been designed to use less uranium and produce almost a third less long-lived radioactive wastes compared with water reactors in operation today.
The EPR turns the nuclear energy in uranium atoms into electrical energy that can be used in homes and businesses. When the nucleus of an atom is split (nuclear fission), the heat produced turns water into pressurised steam, which turns turbines and generates electricity.
(The image shown is indicative only).
Important informationThe name details entered for the visitor when attending HPC must consist of the First Name and Last Name only and must accurately match those on the ID document presented (for example: Joseph Bloggs, NOT - Jo Bloggs or Joseph A Bloggs). Failure to comply with this will prevent the visitor being permitted access under the request.
All visitors must bring a valid passport or driving license with them or they will not be permitted access to site
Privacy Notice
We respect your privacy and value the trust you place in us when you share your personal information with us. Our Privacy Notice (together with EDF Energy's Privacy Policy and Website Terms and Conditions) sets out how we collect and use your personal information, why we use it, with whom we share it, the rights to which you may be entitled and your choices about our use of your personal information, that may arise from your interactions with us.
OverviewOur primary aim in collecting visitor personal information is to manage visitors to our sites, allowing us to ensure the visitors are able to be identified on arrival and to meet our regulatory requirements.
A: Reactor buildingB: Four safeguard buildingsC: Fuel BuildingD: Nuclear auxiliary buildingE: Radioactive waste processing buildingF: Emergency diesel generator buildingG: Turbine buildingH: Power transmission platformI: Operator buildingJ: Pumphouse buildingK: Outfall structureL: Conventional electrical building
Information we collect
In operating the Visitor Management System (the "VMS"):• We keep the information about you that you give us by filling in
the form(s) on the VMS • We keep the information about you contained in the form(s) that
has been filled in on the VMS on your behalf. If you register the visitor's information on the visitor's behalf, you confirm that: - you have the visitor's consent to enter such information onto the VMS; and - you provided the visitor with a copy of the privacy notice
• We keep the originating IP address
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Network for Industrially Co-ordinated Sustainable Land Management in Europe