She is also responsible for driving the integration of geospatial technologies to effectively acquire, manipulate, store and analyse geospatial information for dam safety purposes. She then provided services to Wodonga Institute of TAFE where she managed, maintained and improved the institute's Quality Management System, before moving into a GIS coordination role at North East Water.Īmanda is currently employed at WaterNSW where she leads a multi-disciplined technical team to provide geospatial technology and services that comply with appropriate standards, codes and legislation, and promotes excellence in safety. From there, Amanda branched out into a strategic research role at Melbourne City Council. During her career, Amanda has developed an understanding of the range of issues impacting on urban and asset planning, natural resource management, emergency management preparedness, economic development and education.Īmanda commenced her career at Melbourne Water, managing a variety of GIS asset data capture projects and maintaining asset data quality. It will also focus on new and novel applications, such as system optimisation, planning for traditional and alternative water supplies and detailed end-use demand modelling.Īmanda Walker –Geospatial Technology and Services Manager, Dam Safety and Engineering, WaterNSWĪmanda has over 21 years’ experience in the GIS, survey, drafting, cartography, research and quality management industries within local government, state government and the tertiary education sector. This presentation will showcase the wide range of ways the eWater Source, Australia’s national hydrological modelling platform, MUSIC and Urban Developer are being applied by leading Australian water utilities to plan for sustainability and climate change. While initially focused on water resource planning, models are now being used by water utilities in a wide range of planning and operational contexts including analysis of the integrated urban water cycle within river basins. Water models play an increasingly important role in water management. Urban efficiency and water sensitive planning through water system modelling Russell Riding – Team Leader Automation Delivery, Melbourne Waterĭr Robert Carr – Chief Executive, eWater and Dr Geoffrey Adams – Executive Director Projects, eWater Mark Stephens – Asset Analytics Lead, SA WaterĪmanda Walker – Geospatial Technology and Services Manager, Dam Safety and Engineering, WaterNSW Our panellists will focus on leveraging digital tools, such as smart metering, IoT hardware, data analytics and AI/machine learning, to optimise and automate water resource management. PANEL - Creating intelligent water networks In this presentation, Andrew will discuss how the smart meter program is re-writing Thames Water's understanding of water use, wastage and leakage.ĭominic Hatfield – General Manager of Digital, Sydney Water The utility is getting hourly meter reads, which is proving to be a game changer for the UK water sector. Thames Water is five years into a compulsory smart water meter rollout, with around 500,000 meters installed in London households and at least another 700,000 to be installed by 2025. Charlotte Pordage – Editor, Utility magazineĪndrew Tucker – Water Efficiency Manager, Thames Water (UK)
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