Ozwater'21 Full Conference Guide

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Reimagining our Water Future Kauwipira Yangadlitya Mukapapanthi 4-6 MAY ADELAIDE CONVENTION CENTRE

PROGRAM

OUR PRINCIPAL SPONSOR


Thank you to our generous sponsors PRINCIPAL SPONSOR

MAJOR SPONSORS

GALA DINNER SPONSOR

WELCOME NETWORKING SPONSOR

WATER LEADERS FORUM SPONSOR

PODCAST SPONSOR

DIRECTORS PROGRAM & REIMAGINE HUB SPONSOR

DELEGATE LOUNGE SPONSORS

PRESIDENT’S DINNER & SESSION SPONSOR

PANEL SPONSOR

NATIONAL R&D EXCELLENCE AWARD SPONSOR

STREAM SPONSOR

NATIONAL ORGANISATIONAL EXCELLENCE AWARD SPONSOR

EDUCATION PARTNER

NATIONAL INFRASTRUCTURE PROJECT INNOVATION AWARD SPONSOR

NATIONAL STUDENT WATER PRIZE AWARD SPONSOR

NATIONAL YOUNG WATER PROFESSIONAL OF THE YEAR & STOCKHOLM JUNIOR WATER PRIZE AWARD SPONSOR

ASSOCIATION PARTNER

INTERNATIONAL DEVELOPMENT PARTNER

DESTINATION PARTNER


The Australian Water Association acknowledges the Kaurna people, the Traditional Custodians of the Adelaide Plains, and pay our respects to Elders past and present. We recognise and pay our respect to the cultural heritage, connection and lore with the land and waters.

What’s inside this booklet? 1,800+

attendees

150+

trade exhibitors

200+

presentations

14

workshops & panels

8

focused streams

4

site tours

6

keynotes

3

full days

Welcome Messages

4

Ozwater’21 Online Platform

6

Keynote Speakers

7

Conference MCs

9

COVIDSafe Measures

11

WSAA Stream

12

Sustainability

13

Delegate Lounges

14

Social Program

16

Site Tours

17

Program: Tuesday

18

Program: Wednesday

22

Program: Thursday

26

Workshop/Panel Program

28

Our Ozwater’21 Presenters

32

Thank You to our Reviewers

36

Technical Posters

37

Trade Exhibition

38

General Information

39

Australian Water Awards

40

Room Locations

44

Ozwater’21 Program Planning Committee PROGRAM CO-CHAIRS Karlene Maywald Maywald Consultants Pty Ltd South Australian Water Ambassador, SA

Nicole Davis Redland City Council, QLD

Michael Storey Isle Utilities, NSW

Mark Gobbie Extra Time Advisory, SA

Robbert van Oorschot GHD, VIC

David Ryan Chief Executive, SA Water, SA

Francois Gouws TRILITY, VIC

Carmen Wentrock Tonkin, SA

Gemma Keane Aurecon, NSW

Grant Dixon KPMG, NSW

Elsie Mann Tonkin, SA

Nina Braid Yarra Valley Water, VIC

Steve Morton Department for Environment & Water, SA

Kirsty Blades Australian Water Association

Rachael Nuttall SUEZ, VIC

Lee Devereux Australian Water Association

Nadine Riethmuller Water Corporation, WA

Katie Trevor Australian Water Association

Matthew Robertson TasWater, TAS

Tomo Okai Australian Water Association

PROGRAM DEPUTY CHAIR Anna Jackson SA Water, SA COMMITTEE MEMBERS Darren Cash Sydney Water, NSW Joanne Chong CSIRO, SA David Cunliffe SA Health, SA Darryl Day The Peter Cullen Water & Environment Trust, NT


Welcome Messages

Reimagining our Water Future Kauwipira Yangadlitya Mukapapanthi

A

s National President of the Australian Water Association, I’d like to formally welcome you to Ozwater’21. It has been a long, hard road to get to Adelaide and I need to express my thanks to everyone who has contributed to getting us to the starting blocks! The last time Ozwater was held in Adelaide was in 2015 – and what a different world it was then. Our challenge in 2021 to “Reimagine our Water Future” resonates at this time of huge change and shifting paradigms. I can think of no better event than Ozwater to set the scene for intelligent, robust, and stimulating conversations around how we see the future. The program will challenge our thinking and dare us to look at our responsibilities in delivering sustainable water solutions in our ever-changing landscape. There are huge opportunities for all delegates to embrace new ideas, reconnect with colleagues and establish new networks.

Carmel Krogh OAM President, Australian Water Association

Ozwater is the Association’s premier event, and has evolved over many years to meet the needs of the industry and lead the way in sharing, connecting and inspiring. I am very proud to be President of this great Association at a time when we have been challenged to step up and demonstrate just who we are. Ozwater’21 is unique in its development and formation arising from the effects of COVID. As an organisation, we have sought to provide a platform that allows all participants a valuable experience to help shape our future. I am confident that Ozwater’21 will deliver this. I look forward to meeting and engaging with as many of you as possible over the conference and I encourage you all to maximise the opportunity to immerse yourself in the atmosphere of Ozwater.

On behalf of the entire AWA team, a very warm welcome to Ozwater’21.

There is much to celebrate as we come together in one place to ‘Reimagine our Water Future’. Never has there been a time that we have looked more forward to meeting each other, connecting and sharing our knowledge and experiences. We have had a fantastic response, with the water sector turning out in large numbers to participate in what will be our largest Ozwater in Adelaide ever! This is quite an amazing achievement given international travel restrictions have prohibited our international colleagues and partners from attending in person. Thank you for being part of this extraordinary milestone event and making Ozwater’21 great. The Ozwater’21 Committee and AWA team have done a marvellous job on the program and the finer details that will make Ozwater’21 a memorable one. The streams and speakers are diverse and wide ranging covering the most relevant, thought provoking and innovative topics from across the country with some of our international partners streaming in. We also have a curated digital program for those who cannot attend in person, or for Ozwater’21 delegates to ‘add on’ should you wish to see a presentation that you missed or would like to relive your Ozwater’21 experience. As we strive to deliver amazing experiences for our members, partners and colleagues across the country, I hope that you will take as much away as possible over the next three days from the conference streams, the exhibition and all that the social program has to offer. We will also celebrate the achievements of our sector in the AWA National Water Awards presented at the Gala Dinner. There is much to celebrate and recognise and I really do hope that you enjoy Ozwater’21 as much as I will.

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Corinne Cheeseman Chief Executive, Australian Water Association


OUR PRINCIPAL SPONSOR

How do we Reimagine our Water Future in a world grappling with climate change and gripped by pandemic?

Never has the future appeared so uncertain, and for those of us charged with the responsibility for water, our challenges are immense. The World Bank predicts that 80% of future climate change adaptation responses will be in water related areas, particularly related to reduced water availability and extreme weather events. The challenge is here and now and the future is in our hands. Business as usual is not our business. In a world filled with so much uncertainty, we must reach out and embrace innovation and change. We must challenge our preconceived paradigms and embrace disruption as opportunity.

Hon Karlene Maywald DUniv, GAICD, FTSE Managing Director, Maywald Consultants Pty Ltd South Australian Water Ambassador

Our Ozwater’21 program will challenge your thinking, test your boundaries, and ask you to ask the tough questions. This is the “must attend” event for all of us in the water sector. We are very excited to be able to host this event in Adelaide and we are very much looking forward to welcoming you all back to our conference in person. The past 12 months have been particularly difficult. We have learnt a lot, and it is incredible that we can be in the position to bring you all back together, to share experiences. I look forward to seeing you in Adelaide.

I

warmly welcome you all to South Australia and the beautiful city of Adelaide for Ozwater’21. The largest water industry event in the southern hemisphere, Ozwater provides an unrivalled opportunity to connect, share insights and ideas across our industry, and hear about the big issues we’re facing today. In a time of extraordinary change and challenge, our sector is demonstrating and role modelling resilience. We must continue leading by innovating, partnering and leveraging our collective strengths. This is how we will deliver the sustainable services and operational improvements that our customers and communities deserve and value now and into the future. The water industry plays a key role in shaping healthy, thriving communities and at Ozwater’21, we will Reimagine our Water Future, by sharing our bold ideas, challenges and successes. Prospering in the driest state on the driest continent, the South Australian water sector has for many years been tackling challenges now emerging elsewhere and we’re looking forward to sharing our stories and solutions, and further plans for a sustainable water future. The program will feature more than 130 technical presentations and 80 pitch presentations across the three days, as well as interactive workshops and panel sessions on Tuesday and Wednesday afternoons. Expect to be inspired and leave the conference with new knowledge and a rekindled motivation. Contribute and learn from each other’s deep experience, skills and expertise, plus hear from engaging keynote speakers, from inside and outside the water sector, each morning.

David Ryan Chief Executive, SA Water

I’m really looking forward to being part of this year’s Ozwater, and I encourage you all to make the most of it too.

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Reimagining our Water Future

Ozwater’21 Online Platform

Kauwipira Yangadlitya Mukapapanthi

Access the dedicated Online Platform at awa.jomablue.com/ community/198 Top tips for getting the most out of the Ozwater’21 online platform: Save the Online Platform to your device home screen for easy access. For iPhones, click the share icon in the browser and then Add to Home Screen For Android users, you will receive a prompt the first time you open to Save to Home Screen

You can also review the agenda, favourite and rate sessions, personalise your feed, find exhibitors and sponsors and see frequently asked questions.

Connect with other Ozwater’21 delegates with Networking • Log in to the Online Platform • Click on your name in the event menu to access your profile. Set up your profile by entering your details in “Edit Profile” and make your profile discoverable in “My Privacy”. Now others can find you and request to connect! • To browse other attendees (that have also opted in), use the Find tab in the Networking area. Engage with suggested connections and start building your network. • Don’t miss the attendees wanting to connect with you. Accept their invitations within Requests tab. • To start a 1:1 chat with other attendees, click on the chat icon. You will find this on the bottom right-hand corner of the page. • To view all of the new connections you have made, click on the Connections tab.

Things to know Session Papers

Conference Presentations

Poster Presentations

All Ozwater’21 delegates will have access to technical papers via a dedicated conference proceedings page on the Online Platform. Delegates will receive an SMS to their registered mobile number with instructions.

Ozwater’21 delegates will be able to receive a PDF copy of oral and pitch PowerPoint presentations at the conclusion of Ozwater’21 along with the full conference proceedings to the email address that was used at the time of registering.

Poster pitch presentations are short and snappy 5-minute presentations that occur during the conference program. On top of their presentation, all posters are on display inside the main Exhibition for you to read in your own time. Electronic copies of the posters are also available for download on the online platform.

Q&A Pigeonhole Live

All Q&A will be facilitated on Pigeonhole Live, which delegates can access from your own personal device. An SMS will be sent to your registered mobile number with a link to access Q&A during conference sessions.

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AUSTRALIAN WATER ASSOCIATION


OUR PRINCIPAL SPONSOR

Keynote Speakers Gitanjali Rao

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Scientist, Inventor & Time Magazine’s first ever “Kid of the Year” Social Change Through Innovation Gitanjali Rao was recognised as America’s Top Young Scientist and received an EPA Presidential award for inventing her device “Tethys”—an early lead detection tool. Gitanjali is also the inventor of “Epione”—a device for early diagnosis of prescription opioid addiction using genetic engineering and “Kindly”—an anti-cyberbullying service using AI and Natural Language processing.

Tuesday 4 May

She was honoured as Forbes “30 Under 30 in Science” in 2019 and TIME’s “Top Young Innovator” and “Kid of the Year” for her innovations and STEM workshops she conducts globally, which have inspired over 38,000 students in the last two years across four continents. In her sessions, she shares her own process of innovation that can be used by students all over the world. She is an experienced TED speaker and often presents in global and corporate forums on innovation and the importance of STEM. Gitanjali has her new book “Young Innovator’s Guide to STEM”, which was released in March 2021 which guides students, educators or teachers with a prescribed 5 step innovation process.

Michael Fox

CEO, Fable Food Co Reimagining our Food Future Michael grew up as a meat loving Australian. In 2015 he became vegetarian for health, environmental and ethical reasons. After a 10 year stint riding the startup rollercoaster as Co-Founder and CEO of fashion tech startup Shoes of Prey, in 2019 Michael co-founded Fable Food Co to help people reduce their meat consumption.

Hear me speak on

Tuesday 4 May

Teaming up with a chef/mushroom scientist and a mushroom farmer, Michael and the team at Fable develop delicious meaty food made from mushrooms and all natural, minimally processed plant based ingredients. Launching in December 2019 in partnership with the 3 Michelin Star British chef Heston Blumenthal, Fable products are now available in Australia, the UK and Singapore at over 250 restaurants and cafes, 1,700 retail stores and through the meal kit subscription companies Marley Spoon and HelloFresh.

Simon Griffiths

Co-founder & CEO, Who Gives a Crap The Business of Making a Difference Simon is an engineer and economist turned social entrepreneur. In 2007, after turning down his dream job offer as a corporate high-flyer, he moved from Australia to South Africa to immerse himself in his true passion: development aid. There he discovered that the biggest problem faced by NGOs and social entrepreneurs is a lack of funding. Driven by a passion to use business to give back, in 2010, Simon had the idea to start a toilet paper company that builds toilets in the developing world. In 2012, he launched Who Gives A Crap with a crowdfunding campaign, agreeing to sit on a toilet on a live webfeed until he had pre-sold the first $50,000 of toilet rolls. The multi-award winning launch attracted global media attention and generated more than 2 million social media impressions. Since launching, Who Gives A Crap has grown at 2-3x year-on-year, primarily relying on word-of-mouth to fuel its growth. In just over six years, Who Gives A Crap has donated more than $8 million.

Hear me speak on

Wednesday 5 May

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Reimagining our Water Future

Keynote Speakers

Kauwipira Yangadlitya Mukapapanthi

Tim Jarvis AM

Climate Change Expert, Environmental Scientist, International Explorer Course for Action Tim focuses on lessons he’s learned throughout his various expeditions relating to problem solving, teamwork, change management and goal setting while undertaking such extreme endeavours and how they can be applied to any business. He has great insight after almost two decades of polar travel, and over 20 years working as an environmental scientist, about topics including human-induced environmental change and how we can reduce our own environmental impact. He also looks at the associated opportunities and costs and how to manage change in both our personal and professional lives and at a corporate level. Tim is motivated by a desire to help people achieve key milestones, drawing on parallels from his expeditions and environmental work. His insights apply both to highly motivated individuals working to achieve personal goals as well as organisations embarking on change towards business or sustainability outcomes.

Hear me speak on

Wednesday 5 May

Professor Veena Sahajwalla

Materials Scientist, Engineer and Inventor Waste as a Valuable Resource Professor Veena Sahajwalla is an internationally recognised materials scientist, engineer and inventor revolutionising recycling science. She is renowned for pioneering the high temperature transformation of waste in the production of a new generation of ‘green materials.’  In 2018, Veena launched the world’s first e-waste micro factory and in 2019 she launched her plastics micro factory, a recycling technology breakthrough. She is producing a new generation of green materials and products made entirely, or primarily, from waste. Hear me speak on

Thursday 6 May

Professor Veena also heads the ARC Industrial Transformation Research Hub for ‘green manufacturing’, a leading national research centre that works in collaboration with industry to ensure new recycling science is translated into real world environmental and economic benefits. In 2020, Professor Veena won, and was made Director of, two new research and industrial transformation Hubs: the ARC Microrecycling Hub, and the NESP Sustainable Communities and Waste Hub. Both of these national, collaborative hubs involve leading research institutions and industry stakeholders from across Australia.

Tanya Hosch

2021 South Australian of the Year Thriving Through Inclusion Tanya Hosch has a long and distinguished history in Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander policy, advocacy, governance and fundraising. Before joining the AFL as the first ever Indigenous person and second woman in their Executive ranks in August 2016, Tanya was the Joint Campaign director of the Recognise movement for constitutional recognition. At the AFL Tanya’s portfolios include – Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander issues, gender equality, sexuality and gender diversity, racism and sexism. Tanya is tasked with the implementation of the AFL’s enhanced Indigenous strategy, advising the AFL Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Advisory Council, maintenance of the Respect and Responsibility Policy, 2017, the AFL’s Gender Action Plan and the Gender Diversity Policy. Tanya is a member of the Indigenous Advisory Group of the NAB. She is a Board Director of Circus Oz, and the Australian Film, Television and Radio School and was a member of the Referendum Council that led the process and final recommendation that resulted in The Statement from the Heart in May 2017. A career highlight was contributing as a Consultant on the ABC drama, Total Control.

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AUSTRALIAN WATER ASSOCIATION

Hear me speak on

Thursday 6 May


OUR PRINCIPAL SPONSOR

Conference MCs Tuesday 4 May

Wednesday 5 May

Kate Collins News Presenter

Dr Sandra Hall

Kirsty Blades

Sandra is the current General Manager of the Advanced Water Management Centre, globally ranked number 2 for urban water research. Sandra has a background in the microbial ecology of wastewater treatment plants and has had a 15+ year career managing and leading research professionals in the water industry. Sandra is an advocate for diversity and inclusion in the water industry and has led a number of organisations through transitional change. Sandra is a current Director of the AWA, Chair of the Public and Customer Communications Specialist Network and a Fellow of the IWA.

Kirsty has a career that has spanned 25 years working with associations and not-for-profit (NFP) organisations. Her first NFP encounter was managing Clean Up Australia Day and from that point on she was taken by the opportunity that associations and NFPs offered to make a difference and to help deliver a reimagined future. In 2014, Kirsty was compelled to bring her passion to the Australian Water Association where she has enjoyed the opportunity to share, connect and inspire the water sector through events, programs, marketing and communications.

AWMC Manager, The University of Queensland

Kate Collins has established herself as one of Adelaide’s leading media personalities and currently presents the Nine Network’s flagship 6pm News Bulletin alongside her co-anchor. Kate’s been part of the Nine News family for nearly 15 years team after studying journalism and media at Adelaide University. As part of her high profile, Kate has MC’d many corporate and community events, including Carols by Candlelight, numerous gala dinners and award ceremonies.

Thursday 6 May

Deputy CEO, Australian Water Association

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Delivering trusted water services for a sustainable and healthy South Australia.


COVIDSafe Measures at Ozwater’21 The Australian Water Association has closely followed Government recommendations to develop COVIDSafe Guidelines for AWA events. These guidelines will be in place at Ozwater’21 to ensure attendee health and safety.

COVIDSafe Contact tracing protocols through the use of the SA Government’s COVIDSAfe Check-In

COVIDSafe venue signage and announcements

COVIDSafe Marshals in attendance

1.5m

Contactless name badge collection

Contactless trade visitor registration via a QR code

Physical distancing measures in place in conference rooms and the exhibition hall

Maximum capacities for session rooms

COVID safe food and beverage service

Hand sanitising stations around the venue

? Increased frequency and intensity of cleaning, with emphasis on key touchpoints

Contactless Q&A using own personal devices

AWA staff have been trained to deliver a COVIDSafe event and will be available onsite to respond to any concerns

Your support is essential in staying COVIDSafe 20s

1.5m

Stay home if unwell

Wash your hands regularly

Keep your distance – stay 1.5m apart

Avoid physical contact – no hand shaking

If symptoms develop, seek medical advice and inform AWA

For any questions please see our friendly staff at the Information Desk


WSAA Stream

Reimagining our Water Future Kauwipira Yangadlitya Mukapapanthi

The Many Faces of Resilience The past decade has seen the urban water industry face extreme climatic events in droughts, floods and bushfires. At the same time, record low interest rates and the COVID-19 pandemic have impacted on the economy both positively and negatively.

But the future is different

The industry needs to invest more to meet future climate challenges while protecting the long term interest of customers. In the UK, we see the Scottish water industry working closely with regulators and customers on what is needed to create a climate resilient industry, including CPI+ price increases which have not been seen in Australia for some time. These two sessions will include leaders from Australia and the UK as we unpack the different aspects of a resilient urban water industry including climate change, affordability, customer trends, innovation, water security, asset performance and regional.  The sessions will be facilitated by Adam Lovell, Executive Director, WSAA and include the following speakers and panellists.

SESSION 1

SESSION 2

Adam Lovell Executive Director, WSAA

Alan Sutherland Chief Executive for the Water Industry Commission in Scotland

Roch Cheroux WSAA Chair and Managing Director, Sydney Water

Anna Jackson General Manager, Strategy, Engagement and Innovation, SA Water

Alan Sutherland Chief Executive for the Water Industry Commission in Scotland

Stuart Wilson Deputy Executive Director, WSAA

Lara Olsen WSAA Board Member and Managing Director, South East Water Neil Brennan CEO, Seqwater

Advertorial

Jason Devitt WSAA Board Member and Director Engineering and Commercial Infrastructure, Mackay Regional Council Danielle Francis Manager Liveable Communities, Water Services Association of Australia Kate Miles Head of Business, Systems and Assets Planning, Sydney Water

We chat to Eric Garcin, Performance & Operational Excellence General Manager at SUEZ about how Australian water utilities are starting to embrace new technologies to build the wastewater treatment plants of tomorrow. You’ve recently returned to Australia after working as the Technical & Innovation Director at SUEZ in Paris. What was your experience like in Europe?

Eric Garcin

Performance & Operational Excellence General Manager

I led the innovation and technical expertise for the Group’s water technology portfolio. I was fortunate to have the opportunity to work with some of the world’s top experts and take part in several challenging R&D projects. As part of this role, I was also in charge of signing off SUEZ’s process performance guarantees for all major projects, worldwide.

We’re very fortunate to be working with some forward-thinking utilities who are determined to make a difference.

SUEZ is one of the few to offer process performance guarantees in Australia. How does this benefit Australian water utilities? It reduces risk and places more ownership on us to deliver what we promise. Australian water utilities can adopt new technologies and embrace design and innovation because they have the added safety net of SUEZ’s process performance guarantee. How are Australian water utilities leveraging design and innovation to address current challenges and prepare for the future?

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AUSTRALIAN WATER ASSOCIATION

We’re fortunate to be working with some forward-thinking utilities who are determined to make a difference. They’re searching for new ways to increase savings, optimise plant performance and reduce environmental impacts. They’re adopting

proven, breakthrough smart technologies to shift away from being energy consumers to becoming BioFactories that can transform waste into valuable new resources. Several years of design and innovation led to the concept of the SUEZ BioFactory. How is this concept disrupting the industry’s approach to wastewater management and reuse? The SUEZ BioFactory is made up of several innovative technologies that aim to create new sources of energy and valuable commodities from the wastewater treatment process. Utilities have started combining our patented technologies in new and flexible ways to create their versions of the wastewater treatment plant of tomorrow. CleargreenTM nitrate-shunt and Mainstream Anammox are technologies that are enabling utilities to reduce energy consumption along the wastewater treatment line and allowing maximum carbon redirection for biogas production. Innovative anaerobic digestion technologies are helping utilities achieve cheaper and faster delivery, while DehydrisTM Ultra can help utilities transform biosolids into a valuable product and greatly reduce the volume of materials leaving the plant. Every utility is facing their own unique set of challenges. The value we bring is our breadth of experience and deep understanding of the various combinations these technologies can take, and the expected performance results utilities can achieve in future years of operations.


OUR PRINCIPAL SPONSOR

Sustainability

Sustainability initiatives for

Reimagining our Water Future Kauwipira Yangadlitya Mukapapanthi

Your Buyers Guide The buyers guide has gone digital. It takes approximately 10 litres of water to produce one A4 page of paper. The Ozwater’19 Buyers Guide was 44 pages and had a print run of 4,000. By moving online, we have saved 880,000 litres of water! You’ll find everything you need and more in this digital offering.

Your Lanyard Your lanyard is made from bamboo fibre, and the backing card made from cardboard with a biodegradable celloglaze. What does that mean? You can recycle the card! When you leave Ozwater’21, you’ll see labelled bins where you can return your lanyard and card.

Your Satchel Your goodie bag is a good bag! Your satchel has been created by Boomerang Bags using material diverted from landfill, and created by local communities to tackle plastic pollution at its source. Each bag is hand made and unique. Not only are we saving material from landfill, but we’re reducing the number of plastic bags in our community. We’ve also limited the number of satchels this year to ensure we only produced what we need.

Your Menu This weeks’ menu is packed full of authentic, wholesome foods sourced from local sustainable environments. You’ll enjoy a delicious array of local produce including plant based menu items like curries, salads, tagines, muesli and even arancini. The Adelaide Convention Centre’s efforts in food rescue not only help to feed the hungry, they also divert rubbish from landfill, helping to save greenhouse gas emissions and water usage. The ACC even has a worm farm, which serves perfectly for composting gardens surrounding the venue.

Your Online Community This year you will not find any printed copies of abstracts, papers and posters. Head over to the Online Community to get everything you need.

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Reimagining our Water Future

Delegate Lounges

Kauwipira Yangadlitya Mukapapanthi

While you are at Ozwater come to the Grenof Delegate Lounge and take the opportunity to discuss your water and wastewater issues and challenges with our dedicated team of Technical Services, Operations and Research & Development Managers at Site D12 or simply feel free to browse, using our interactive tablets or brochures. You can talk to people who truly understand your business and can help resolve challenges with ‘Simple Solutions That Work’. A simple yet elegant stand, with modern lighting and colours and clear displays highlighting our distinct products and services.

Downer is the leading provider of integrated services in Australia and New Zealand, delivering complete water lifecycle solutions for municipal and industrial water users. Our expertise includes asset management and asset maintenance, water and wastewater networks, wastewater treatment, biosolids treatment and metering services. Visit the Downer Delegate Lounge which will showcase the latest in biosolids treatment and metering services innovations.

Come and relax at the Veolia Delegate Lounge – a place to re-connect and recharge during the conference. Use the space to catch up with colleagues, read some case studies, re-charge your phone, get in touch with an expert, or simply to enjoy your free freshly made barista coffee!

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AUSTRALIAN WATER ASSOCIATION


Lendlease Services is a leading infrastructure provider, connecting and maintaining essential services that ensure a positive and enduring impact on the customers and communities we serve

remote real-time monitoring of water quality Australian-built TracWater TWIG water quality analysers are the worldʼs first remotely-operated, in-ground, cloud-based, water quality robots TracWater water quality analysers never sleep communicating up to ten key water quality parameters (including transient pressure) and five operational heartbeat indicators constantly 24/7/365. TracWater robots have operated non-stop since 2016 providing key water quality information on a water network of 3,250 km's for the 6th largest city in Australia. TracWater units are portable, vandal-proof and designed to be completely hidden in any urban landscape. They provide a constant real-time stream of key water quality data at a really affordable cost. Traditional grabsampling can never match a TracWater TWIG for effectiveness, ease of use, robustness, data quality and measurement accuracy.

find us at: Patent 020/050073 Patent 020219865 Patents Pending

www.tracwater.com.au

Ozwater‘21 Stand K09


Social Program

Reimagining our Water Future Kauwipira Yangadlitya Mukapapanthi

Arrival Cleansing & Smoking Ceremony Date: Monday 3 May Time: 5:30pm-6:00pm Venue: Main Entrance Plaza off North Terrace, Adelaide Convention Centre Dress: Smart Casual Cost: Included in Full Delegate Registration Join us at our first ever Ozwater cleansing and smoking ceremony prior to the Welcome Networking Evening on Monday. This traditional ceremony, to be performed by the Kuma Kaaru group, is used to cleanse places and people of bad spirits, and to promote the wellbeing of guests visiting Kaurna country.

Welcome Networking Evening Date: Monday 3 May Time: 6:00pm–8:00pm Venue: Foyer E, Adelaide Convention Centre Dress: Smart casual Cost: Included in Full Delegate Registration Before the formal proceedings begin, take this opportunity to network with other delegates and enjoy the picturesque views of the Karrawirra Parri (River Torrens). It’s a great way to meet each other before the main event! Enjoy canapés and drinks in a casual evening setting with minimal formalities. Proudly supported by:

Gala Dinner & Australian Water Awards

SOLD OUT

Date: Tuesday 4 May Time: 6:30pm–11:00pm Venue: Halls CDE, Adelaide Convention Centre Dress: After 5 Note: Tickets must be collected from the Gala Dinner ticket counter outside the exhibition hall. It’s the highlight of the social program and the night where delegates gather to celebrate the industry’s successes and inspiring individuals. Enjoy a delicious three-course dinner with drinks and entertainment. See page 40 for the National Award Finalists. Proudly supported by:

Australian Water Awards Sponsor:

Happy Hour Date: Wednesday 5 May Time: 5:30pm–6:30pm Venue: Foyer F (outside the Exhibition Hall), Adelaide Convention Centre Dress: Business attire Cost: Included in Full Delegate and Wednesday Registration Happy Hour is the perfect opportunity for delegates, exhibitors and sponsors to ‘wine down’ after day two of conference activities while catching up with colleagues from across the country!

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OUR PRINCIPAL SPONSOR

Site Tours

THURSDAY 6 MAY SITE TOUR TWO: Operations Control Centre Walking Tour

SOLD OUT

See how SA Water are pursuing their goal of a zero cost energy future with a tour through their Operations Control Centre. You’ll also get further insight into the sensors within SA Water’s smart network used to transmit real time data. Time: 3:30pm–5:00pm Tour Duration: 1.5 hours Departing: Adelaide Convention Centre – meet at the Convention Centre’s Central Desk at 3.30pm sharp Cost: AWA Member $40, Non-member $56 Dress: Please wear comfortable closed-toed shoes (suitable for walking) and weather appropriate clothing (rain jackets, sunglasses and hat, warm clothes).

FRIDAY 7 MAY SITE TOUR THREE: Southern Metropolitan Reuse Schemes for Dual Reticulation, Municipal Irrigation and Viticulture Tour

TICKETS AVAILABLE See Information Desk

Get an insight into SA Water’s reuse schemes and new technologies at both the Christies Beach and Aldinga Wastewater Treatment Plants. Then enjoy lunch and a tour of Paxton Wines, where you will get to see the recycled reticulation and biodynamic production, supported by Aldinga WWTP and Willunga Basin Water. Time: 8:45am–4:00pm Tour Duration: 7.25 hours Departing: Adelaide Convention Centre – meet at the Convention Centre’s Central Desk at 8.45am sharp Cost: AWA Member $90, Non-member $126 Dress: Please wear long pants, a long-sleeved shirt and closed-toed shoes (preferably safety boots). SA Water will supply high vis vests and safety glasses, as required. Please also wear weather-appropriate clothing (rain jackets, sunglasses and hat, warm clothes).

SITE TOUR FOUR: Adelaide Desalination Plant, Zero Cost Energy Future and Recreational Access to Reservoir Reserves Tour

TICKETS AVAILABLE See Information Desk

See how SA Water are pursuing their goal of a zero cost energy future with a tour of the Adelaide Desalination Plant and Happy Valley Treatment Plant and Reservoir. As part of the tour you’ll also enjoy a picnic lunch by the reservoir. Time: 8:45am–3:00pm Tour Duration: 6.25 hours Departing: Adelaide Convention Centre – meet at the Convention Centre’s Central Desk at 8.45am sharp Cost: AWA Member $90, Non-member $126 Dress: Please wear long pants, a long-sleeved shirt and closed-toed shoes (preferably safety boots). SA Water will supply high vis vests and safety glasses, as required. Please also wear weather-appropriate clothing (rain jackets, sunglasses and hat, warm clothes).

ALL TOURS COURTESY OF:

OZWATER’21 Reimagining our Water Future | Kauwipira Yangadlitya Mukapapanthi |

17


4

MAY

Reimagining our Water Future

Program

TUESDAY 4 MAY

Kauwipira Yangadlitya Mukapapanthi

8:30am–10:00am

OPENING CEREMONY | KEYNOTE SPEAKER SESSION | GITANJALI RAO | MICHAEL FOX

10:00am–10:45am

MORNING TEA

10:45am–12:15pm

10:50am–10:55am

10:55am–11:20am

11:20am–11:45am

11:45am–12:10pm

12:10pm–12:15pm

STREAM 1

STREAM 2

EXCELLENCE IN OPERATIONS, ASSET MANAGEMENT & PROJECT DELIVERY

EXCELLENCE IN OPERATIONS, ASSET MANAGEMENT & PROJECT DELIVERY

CONDITION ASSESSMENT

BENCHMARKING, PARTNERSHIPS & TRAINING

RIVERBANK ROOMS 7 & 8

RIVERBANK ROOM 5

E

P1/152

P4/274

P8/132

INTERNAL ROBOTIC TOOL FOR REMOTE WALL CONDITION ASSESMENT AND INSPECTION OF RISING MAINS Dr Jaime Valls Miro – University of Technology Sydney

INTERNATIONAL LEAKAGE MANAGEMENT BENCHMARKING – A COMPARISON OF UTILITY PERFORMANCE, INVESTMENT, AND BEST PRACTICES Dr Cameron McPhail – Isle Utilities

WARRA Dr Quin

288

335

118

USING ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE FOR PIPELINE AUTOMATED DEFECT RECOGNITION Quentin Bechet – Veolia Michelle Aguilar – Vapar

ASSET MANAGEMENT CUSTOMER VALUE 2020 BENCHMARKING INDUSTRY OUTCOMES James Goode – Water Services Association of Australia Farshad Ibrahimi – Isle Utilities

BUSHFI WATER ASM Mo

164

146

266

PRESSURE PIPELINE CRITICALITY AND RISK Mark Lee – Central Coast Council James Thorne – WSP

PUBLIC/PRIVATE PARTNERSHIPS FOR LEAN INFRASTRUCTURE DELIVERY Tony Goodhew & Mark Vaughan – Logan Water

WHOLE RURAL Toyah F

376

96

213

TECHNOLOGY DELIVERS UNDERWATER INTELLIGENCE AND OPERATIONAL SAVINGS Daniel Ford – Allwater

TECHNICAL TRAINING MAKING WAVES Michael Seaman & Camilla Goodwin – SA Water

NEPEAN Sally Wi

P2/318

P5/18

P9/417

THERMODYNAMIC PUMP PERFORMANCE BENCHMARKING James Curtis – Cardno

OVERCOMING CONSTRUCTION CHALLENGES IN DELIVERING THE LARGEST DRINKING WATER UV PLANT IN AUSTRALIA Jason West – SA Water Michelle Penington – Aurecon

USING M EXTREM Laura Fu

12:15pm–1:15pm

LUNCH EXCELLENCE IN OPERATIONS, ASSET MANAGEMENT & PROJECT DELIVERY

1:15pm–3:15pm

EXCELLENCE IN OPERATIONS, ASSET MANAGEMENT & PROJECT DELIVERY

WASTEWATER TREATMENT & NUTRIENT REMOVAL

LIFECYCLE PLANNING

RIVERBANK ROOM 5

RIVERBANK ROOMS 7 & 8

E

Session Sponsor: 1:20pm–1:25pm

1:25pm–1:50pm

1:50pm–2:15pm

2:15pm–2:40pm

2:40pm–3:05pm

P3/10

P6/112

P10/80

MANAGING SUDDEN SURGE OF NITROGEN LOAD AT BERMAGUI SEWAGE TREATMENT PLANT Dr Hemadri Saha – WSP Australia

STRATEGIC PLANNING AND STRATEGIC THINKING: THE ULTIMATE POWER COUPLE IN ADAPTIVE PLANNING Nina Kennewell – Aurecon Kathryn Silvester – Sydney Water

EMERGE DESALI Neil Palm

203

125

ACHIEVING TOTAL NITROGEN <1: LOGAN CITY SETS THE BENCHMARK FOR SUSTAINABLE WASTEWATER TREATMENT Brent Gibbs – Downer Utilities, Logan Water Partnership

SYDNEY WATER GUIDELINES FOR ROBUST AND EFFICIENT PLANNING OF WASTEWATER TREATMENT ASSETS William Wu & Alex Robertson – Sydney Water

WATER, Dr Paul NSW He

198

144

181

BIN THE FLOC, BOOST THE ROCK: USE OF HYDROCYCLONES TO PROMOTE AEROBIC GRANULAR SLUDGE Cameron Staib – Stantec

RISKY BUSINESS: QUANTITATIVE RISK ASSESSMENT TOOL FOR A COMPLEX WASTEWATER INFRASTRUCTURE PROJECT Amie Aldred – WSP

DELIVE Oscar va

23

136

285

UNDERSTANDING SOLIDS BEHAVIOUR AND BIOLOGICAL DYNAMICS IN ANAEROBIC LAGOONS FOR IMPROVED ENERGY PRODUCTION FROM WASTE Peter Wardrop – Melbourne Water

CLOSING THE LOOP ON PROJECT COST ESTIMATION, STARTING WITH CONSISTENCY Nicholas Smith – TasWater

“IT NEV FOLLOW William Christop

28

103

185

MABR PROCESS INTENSIFICATION CAPABILITY – SUBIACO WRRF PILOT TRIAL PERFORMANCE Nadine Oschmann – SUEZ Water Technologies and Solutions

SAFETY IN PLANNING Anna Giudice – Water Corporation

WE SUR ON CAT Lisa And

3:05pm–3:10pm

3:15pm–4:00pm RIVERBANK ROOM 2

Sentis presents: DRIVING A POSITIVE SAFETY CULTURE: CREATING WORKPLACE CULTURES BASED ON TRUST, COLLABORATION AND A WILLINGNESS TO REPORT

6:30pm-11:00pm

18

P11/299

EMERGI NATION Jon McN

AFTERNOON TEA WORKSHOP 1

4:00pm-5:30pm

P7/333 OPTIMISING PIPE ROUTING IN 3D Alex Osti – Mott MacDonald

AUSTRALIAN WATER ASSOCIATION

WORKSHOP 2

ROOMS L2 & 3

Department for Water and Environment presents: WATER FOR GROWTH – DEFINING THE WATER SECTOR’S ROLE IN AUSTRALIA’S POST COVID ECONOMIC RECOVERY AND AS A FOUNDATION FOR FUTURE PROSPERITY

OZWATER’21 GALA DINNER & AUSTRALIAN WATER AWARDS (TICKET REQUIRED)

WaterRA NEXT-G (PART 1 *See Da


Poster Pitch Presentation

Workshop/Panel

Technical/Case Study Presentation

Student Water Prize

Accent Speaker

Top 14 Papers

Workshop

Virtual Presentation

OUR PRINCIPAL SPONSOR

Panel

&

A D BEST

NG

RE

THE

OR A

NG

LE A

8:30am

MORNING TEA

10:00am

STREAM 3

STREAM 4

EXTREME EVENTS: RESPONSES, RECOVERY & FUTURE PLANNING

RESILIENCE & WATER SECURITY

WATER QUALITY

WATER CONSERVATION AND DEMAND MANAGEMENT

RIVERBANK ROOMS 3 & 4

ROOM L3

10:45am

P8/132

P12/52

WARRAGAMBA WILDFIRE & WATER QUALITY Dr Quinn Ollivier – WaterNSW

A SCIENCE BASED APPROACH TO WATER RESTRICTIONS FOR GREEN SPACES Kirsty Jones – Hunter Water Corporation Dr Paul Lamble – Peak Water Consulting

118

408

BUSHFIRE ASH AND DROUGHT-BREAKING HEAVY RAINFALL IMPACTING WATER QUALITY AND TREATABILITY ASM Mohiuddin & Yue-Cong Wang – Sydney Water

SEARCHING FOR BEST PRACTISE DEMAND MANAGEMENT Jethro Laidlaw – Power and Water Corporation

266

393

WHOLE OF SYSTEM APPROACH TO EXTREME RAINFALL EVENTS IMPACTING A RURAL COMMUNITY’S WATER SUPPLY Toyah Foote – Seqwater

‘SAVE YOUR BUCKETS’: ENERGISING COMMUNITY WATER SAVING BEHAVIOURS Kellie De Waal & Alicia Nash – Hunter Water Corporation

213

9

NEPEAN WATER FILTRATION PLANT: PLANNING FOR AN UNCERTAIN FUTURE Sally Williamson – Aurecon

WATER CONSERVATION CONTEXT SETTING CAMPAIGN Karen Owens – Melbourne Water

10:50am

10:55am

11:20am

11:45am

P9/417

P13/406

USING MICROSCOPY TO VALIDATE OPERATIONAL DECISION MAKING DURING EXTREME EVENTS Laura Fuhrman – Icon Water

REGULATION OF WATER CONSERVATION - ESSENTIAL OR EXCESSIVE? Dr Rachel Watson – Institute for Sustainable Futures, University of Technology Sydney

12:10pm

LUNCH

&

MATE

OPENING CEREMONY | KEYNOTE SPEAKER SESSION | GITANJALI RAO | MICHAEL FOX

12:15pm

EXTREME EVENTS: RESPONSES, RECOVERY & FUTURE PLANNING

RESILIENCE & WATER SECURITY

ESTABLISHING EMERGENCY SUPPLY

CLIMATE AND FUTURE WATER SECURITY

ROOM L3

RIVERBANK ROOMS 3 & 4

1:15pm

Session Sponsor: P10/80

P14/194

EMERGENCY WATER SOLUTION IN A PANDEMIC - 7,000M3/DAY SEAWATER DESALINATION PLANT Neil Palmer – Osmoflo

HOW PURIFIED RECYCLED WATER FOR DRINKING CAN SUPPORT A CLIMATE RESILIENT SUPPLY PORTFOLIO FOR SYDNEY Paul de Sa – Sydney Water

1:20pm

317

WATER, SANITATION AND HYGIENE IN HUMANITARIAN EMERGENCIES Dr Paul Byleveld NSW Health

1:25pm

UNDERSTANDING CLIMATE RISKS TO WATER SECURITY IN REGIONAL NSW Mark Simons – NSW Department of Planning, Industry and Environment

181

32

DELIVERING WELLINGTON’S EMERGENCY WATER NETWORK Oscar van Paassen – Cardno

EMERGENCY, INTERIM AND LONG-TERM RESPONSES TO ENSURE WATER SECURITY FOR KANGAROO ISLAND Dr Michelle Irvine – SA Water

1:50pm

285

280

“IT NEVER RAINS BUT IT POURS”: EMERGENCY WATER SUPPLY RESPONSE FOLLOWING THE BEGA VALLEY BUSHFIRES William Thompson – GHD Christopher Best – Bega Valley Shire Council

IMPACT OF WATER LITERACY ON ATTITUDES TOWARDS PURIFIED RECYCLED WATER Dr Nikki Sims-Chilton – Seqwater

185

405

WE SURVIVED THE FIRESTORM; WHAT’S NEXT? THE IMPACT OF BUSHFIRES ON CATCHMENTS AND COMMUNITIES Lisa Andersons – MidCoast Council

CHALLENGING THE APPROACH TO RECYCLED WATER Dr Rachel Watson – Institute for Sustainable Futures, University of Technology Sydney Dr Lydia Aristuti – Sydney Water

2:15pm

2:40pm

P11/299

P15/33

EMERGING STRONGER: BUILDING RESILIENCE ACROSS OUR CRITICAL NATIONAL INFRASTRUCTURE Jon McNish & Catherine Jones – PwC

MANAGING WATER SECURITY RISKS ACROSS DIVERSE AND COMPLEX WATER SYSTEMS Steve Kotz – SA Water

3:05pm

AFTERNOON TEA PANEL 3

RIVERBANK ROOMS 3 & 4

3:15pm PANEL 4

WaterRA presents: NEXT-GEN WASTEWATER-BASED EPIDEMIOLOGY | COLOSSOS AND BEYOND (PART 1) *See Day 2 Program for Part 2 of this session

RIVERBANK ROOMS 7 & 8

International Water Association Australia (IWAA) presents: LEADING GLOBAL PRACTICES IN RIVER BASIN MANAGEMENT

4:00pm

OZWATER’21 GALA DINNER & AUSTRALIAN WATER AWARDS (TICKET REQUIRED)

OZWATER’21 Reimagining our Water Future | Kauwipira Yangadlitya Mukapapanthi |

6:30pm

19


4

MAY

Reimagining our Water Future

Program

TUESDAY 4 MAY

Kauwipira Yangadlitya Mukapapanthi

8:30am–10:00am

OPENING CEREMONY | KEYNOTE SPEAKER SESSION | GITANJALI RAO | MICHAEL FOX

10:00am–10:45am

MORNING TEA

10:45am–12:15pm

STREAM 5

STREAM 6

SAFEGUARDING COMMUNITY & ENVIRONMENTAL HEALTH

ACHIEVING A CIRCULAR ECONOMY

MICROBIOLOGY

PLANNING/STRATEGY

RIVERBANK ROOM 6

ROOM L1 Session Sponsor:

10:50am–10:55am

PACES

10:55am–11:20am

11:20am–11:45am

11:45am–12:10pm

P16/309

P18/182

P21/275

PUTTING “ENERGY’ INTO NAEGLERIA RISK MANAGEMENT Dr Abigail Morrow – Hunter Water

NO OPPORTUNITY WASTED: UTILITY COLLABORATION WITH PARTNERS TO REALISE A LOCAL CIRCULAR ECONOMY Joel Edwards – Icon Water

UTILITA IN THE F Chris Mc

LEGIONNAIRES DISEASE IN THE TIME OF COVID-19: INVESTIGATING THE ROLE OF STAGNATION IN LEGIONELLA PNEUMOPHILA CONTAMINATION OF POTABLE WATER SYSTEMS Dr Harriet Whiley – Flinders University

THE TRANSITION TO CIRCULARITY AND A LOW CARBON FUTURE IN SEVERN TRENT (UK) Pete Vale – Severn Trent Water

216

421

153

160

FIGHT AGAINST ANTIBIOTIC RESISTANCE IN WATER SYSTEMS Jianhua Guo – The University of Queensland

A CIRCULAR BASELINE ANALYSIS FRAMEWORK FOR WATER UTILITIES Dr Lisa Ehrenfried – Yarra Valley Water Jodie Bricout – Lifecycles

GENDER CONNE Melita G Technol

422

277

ASSURING THE PROTECTION OF PUBLIC HEALTH IN WATER RECYCLING SCHEMES Dr Ben van den Akker – SA Water

TRANSITION TO CIRCULAR ECONOMY: MEASURING AND DRIVING PERFORMANCE AT RRC’S (WWTP’S) Peter Donaghy – Urban Utilities

12:10pm–12:15pm

DIVERS RECRUI Gemma

P19/200 THE PEOPLE-CENTRED APPROACH TO ACHIEVING A CIRCULAR ECONOMY Kyle Olsen & Jarrad Legg – Yarra Valley Water

logy

12:15pm–1:15pm

LUNCH

1:15pm–3:15pm

SAFEGUARDING COMMUNITY & ENVIRONMENTAL HEALTH

DELIVERING AN OUTSTANDING CUSTOMER EXPERIENCE

CONTAMINANTS OF CONCERN

CUSTOMER ENGAGEMENT

RIVERBANK ROOM 6

ROOM L1 Session Sponsor:

1:20pm–1:25pm

MATE

1:25pm–1:50pm

SW

1:50pm–2:15pm

R

2:15pm–2:40pm

YCLED

2:40pm–3:05pm

P17/358

P20/63

P22/161

PFAS REMEDIATION – KEY STRATEGIES AND CASE STUDIES FOR NON-CONVENTIONAL SITES 1 Dr Ali Farhat – GHD

WATER NIGHT 2020 – COMING FACE TO FACE WITH YOUR WATER USING AUTOPILOT Chris Philpot – Smart Approved WaterMark

THE SIL LOGAN Michael

157

154

95

DEVELOPING A RISK ASSESSMENT AND MANAGEMENT FRAMEWORK FOR THE PRIORITISATION OF CONTAMINANTS OF EMERGING CONCERN (CEC) Dr Steven Melvin – Griffith University

CUSTOMER LED PRODUCT AND SERVICES: INTRODUCING DIGITAL WATER METERS Ash Walsh – Yarra Valley Water

WATER Peter Ge

109

210

381

MANAGEMENT OF DRINKING WATER SUPPLY WITH EMERGING CONTAMINANTS PRESENT Charlie Gordon – ECT2

HOW TO DRIVE CUSTOMER ADVOCACY, ENGAGEMENT AND BEHAVIOURAL CHANGE Dr Christoph Prackwieser & Monica Heinrich – Sydney Water

ENGAGI Edwina

404

61

264

RUBBER SEALING RINGS: HOW GOOD COLLABORATION WITH INDUSTRY LED TO POSITIVE CHANGE Margaret Whittle & David Cook – SA Water

RESEARCHING CUSTOMER ATTITUDES TO WATER CONSERVATION IN THE HUNTER Kirsty Jones – Hunter Water Corporation Dr Sonia Vilches-Montero – University of Newcastle

THE PRO ADMINI Michelle

339

209

86

MEDITPLAST: ASSESSMENT OF MICROPLASTICS OF FATE AND BEHAVIOR OF MICROPLASTICS ON A COASTAL TERRITORY Kathy Northcott – Veolia

logy

MISSING VOICES: VICTIM-SURVIVOR PERSPECTIVES ON REFORMS TO THE VICTORIAN WATER BUSINESS CUSTOMER SERVICE CODES 2017 Eliza Venville – Monash University

SCALAB EMPOW Ben Fitz

3:05pm–3:10pm

WATER

3:15pm–4:00pm

AFTERNOON TEA PANEL 5

4:00pm-5:30pm

AWA & Aurecon presents: INCORPORATING INDIGENOUS WORLD VIEW INTO OUR WATER FUTURE – PERSPECTIVES FROM AOTEAROA NEW ZEALAND AND AUSTRALIA

6:30pm-11:00pm

20

RIVERBANK ROOM 5

AUSTRALIAN WATER ASSOCIATION

PANEL 6 Sponsored by:

ROOM L1

AWA Water Recycling Specialist Network presents: PURIFIED RECYCLED WATER FOR DRINKING: THE NEED FOR A NATIONAL APPROACH?

OZWATER’21 GALA DINNER & AUSTRALIAN WATER AWARDS (TICKET REQUIRED)

Melbour HOW A ‘REIMAG


ILITIES

Poster Pitch Presentation

Workshop/Panel

Technical/Case Study Presentation

Student Water Prize

Accent Speaker

Top 14 Papers

Workshop

Virtual Presentation

OUR PRINCIPAL SPONSOR

Panel

OPENING CEREMONY | KEYNOTE SPEAKER SESSION | GITANJALI RAO | MICHAEL FOX MORNING TEA STREAM 7

STREAM 8

STREAM 9

DIVERSITY, INCLUSION & EQUITY

STUDENT WATER PRIZE

ROOM L2

RIVERBANK ROOM 2

WATER LEADERS FORUM (INVITE ONLY)

Sponsored by:

Sponsored by:

P21/275 UTILITA WATER SOLUTIONS – CONTINUING TO LEARN ON, OFF & IN THE FIELD Chris McRae – Utilita Water Solutions 216

SWP01

DIVERSITY AND INCLUSION LESSONS LEARNT FROM RECRUITMENT Gemma Keane & Mary O’Keeffe – Aurecon

AN INVESTIGATION INTO THE OPTIMISATION AND EVALUATION OF SMART PONDS FOR SLUDGE MANAGEMENT Raveena Raju – The University of Western Australia (WA)

160

SWP02

GENDER EQUALITY, INCLUSION AND SDG GOAL 6: THE CRITICAL CONNECTION Melita Grant – Institute for Sustainable Futures, University of Technology Sydney

AN INNOVATIVE WAY OF TREATING WASTEWATER AND SLUDGE EMPLOYING A NOVEL AMMONIA-OXIDIZING BACTERIA GENUS CANDIDATUS NITROSOGLOBUS Zhiyao Wang – The University of Queensland (QLD) SWP03

G

PLEASE REFER TO THE ONLINE PLATFORM FOR PRESENTER DETAILS

THE DEVELOPMENT OF NOVEL NANOFUNCTIONAL WASTEWATER REMEDIATION STRATEGIES: CREATING CLEAN WATER FOR THE MANY, NOT THE FEW Piumie Rajapaksha – RMIT University (VIC)

10:00am–1:00pm Reimagining our Water Future Water Leaders from across the country will come together in this session to develop their vision for our water future. The outcomes from this session will be shared with conference delegates.

INDUSTRY SAFETY & WELLBEING

STUDENT WATER PRIZE

ROOM L2

RIVERBANK ROOM 2

DIRECTORS PROGRAM PANORAMA BALLROOM

Sponsored by:

Sponsored by:

P22/161

R USING

THE SILENT ALARM - MANAGING THE RISK OF FATIGUE AT LOGAN WATER Michael Silke – WSP 95

SWP04

AL

WATER INDUSTRY MENTAL HEALTH FRAMEWORK Peter Gee – Water Services Assocation of Australia

NON-REVENUE WATER: THE EFFECT OF PRESSURE REDUCING VALVE SETTINGS ON A RETICULATED WATER SUPPLY SYSTEM Andrea Georgiou – Charles Darwin University (NT)

MS TO 2017

WATER LEADERS FORUM

LUNCH

E

ON IN

PANORAMA BALLROOM

381 ENGAGING AND SUPPORTING A TRANSITIONING WORKFORCE Edwina Chapman – Allwater 264 THE PROCESS TRIAL: REMOVING THE CLUTTER OF SAFETY ADMINISTRATION CONTROLS Michelle Oberg & Ben Hutchinson – Downer 86 SCALABLE COMMUNICATIONS PRACTICES FOR A SAFETYEMPOWERED WORKFORCE Ben Fitzgerald & Borjana Stazic-Mandi – SA Water

DIRECTORS PROGRAM 1:15pm–5:30pm

Managing Risks and Emerging Opportunities Directors and CEO’s of SWP05 water related businesses are invited to explore key topics STORM WATER CHANNELS IN A WATER SENSITIVE WORLD that are being discussed Kate Harriden – Australian National University (ACT) at board tables around the country. Keynote speakers and panellists will discuss SWP06 their experience in two areas: USE OF ARTIFICIAL NEURAL NETWORKS AND FLUID Cybersecurity and the Water TRANSIENT WAVES FOR ACTIVE AND PASSIVE INSPECTION Energy Nexus. The audience OF WATER PIPELINES will participate in a facilitated Jessica Maria Bohorquez Arevalo – The University of Adelaide (SA) Q&A to delve deeper into these two topics. SWP07 For program information, CONTROLLING HYDROGEN SULPHIDE AND SILOXANES IN please scan the QR code below BIOGAS FOR ENHANCED COGENERATION EFFICIENCY Chris Skellern – The University of Sydney (NSW)

AFTERNOON TEA PANEL 7

RIVERBANK ROOM 6

Melbourne Water presents: HOW A LEADING DIVERSITY PRACTICE ENABLES US TO ‘REIMAGINE OUR WATER FUTURE’

OZWATER’21 GALA DINNER & AUSTRALIAN WATER AWARDS (TICKET REQUIRED)

OZWATER’21 Reimagining our Water Future | Kauwipira Yangadlitya Mukapapanthi |

21


5

MAY

Reimagining our Water Future

Program

WEDNESDAY 5 MAY

Kauwipira Yangadlitya Mukapapanthi

8:30am–10:00am

KEYNOTE SPEAKER SESSION | SIMON GRIFFITHS | TIM JARVIS AM

10:00am–10:45am

MORNING TEA

10:45am–12:15pm

10:50am–10:55am

10:55am–11:20am

11:20am–11:45am

11:45am–12:10pm

12:10pm–12:15pm

STREAM 1

STREAM 2

EXCELLENCE IN OPERATIONS, ASSET MANAGEMENT & PROJECT DELIVERY

EXCELLENCE IN OPERATIONS, ASSET MANAGEMENT & PROJECT DELIVERY

ASSET ANALYTICS

OPERATIONS & WATER QUALITY

RIVERBANK ROOMS 7 & 8

RIVERBANK ROOM 5

P24/169

P28/180

P32/102

CRITICAL AND SMALL PIPE PREDICTION WITHIN 200M OF FAILURE Yang Wang – University of Technology Sydney

WATER QUALITY PREDICTION IN A CHLORAMINATED SYSTEM DURING DROUGHT OPERATIONS Yang Wang – University of Technology Sydney Andrew Peters – Sydney Water

ADAPTI PARRAM Lydia Ar

278

51

PREVENTATIVE MAINTENANCE OF SEWER MAINS USING ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE Dr Quentin Bechet – Veolia Misharna Small – Western Water

INCREASED CHLORAMINE DOSING SUMMER TRIAL: CHLORAMINE VS NITRIFICATION, A BATTLE FOR SE QUEENSLAND’S DISINFECTION RESIDUALS Dr Cameron Veal – Seqwater Charlene Wong – Engeny Water Management

178

415

284

ADVANCES IN LEAK PREVENTION TO MINIMISE UNACCOUNTED WATER Dammika Vitanage – Sydney Water

TOTALLY RANDOM FORESTS; ASSESSING ALGAL RISK IN A CLIMATE OF DEEP UNCERTAINTY John Stanmore – Hunter Water Corporation

CARE IN TO COV Rebecca

70

133

97

REMOTE INSPECTION AND CONDITION ASSESSMENT OF HIGH-RISK ASSETS USING DIGITAL TWIN TECHNOLOGY FOR OPERATIONAL ASSET MANAGEMENT PROCESS Venkat Coimbatore – Water Corporation Ed Boxall – Sensorem

CLOSED LOOP OZONATED WATER MAINS CLEANING Scott Barnes – Grenof Chris McRae – Utilita Water Solutions

EXTREM DETAIL Russell B

P25/188

P29/346

SMART SENSORS DEVELOPED FOR QUALITY CONTROL OF NEW LINING TECHNOLOGIES James Gardner – Water Services Association of Australia

ONLINE ANALYSER WITHOUT SAMPLE FILTRATION FOR WATER QUALITY MONITORING Linda Shi – The University of Adelaide

12:15pm–1:15pm

LUNCH EXCELLENCE IN OPERATIONS, ASSET MANAGEMENT & PROJECT DELIVERY

1:15pm–3:15pm

1:20pm–1:25pm

1:25pm–1:50pm

1:50pm–2:15pm

2:15pm–2:40pm

2:40pm–3:05pm

3:05pm–3:10pm

DIGITAL OPERATIONS

WATER TREATMENT RIVERBANK ROOM 5

P26/353

P30/296

P33/106

DIGITAL TWINS: PROBLEM SOLVING WITH DATA DRIVEN AND PHYSICS BASED MODELS FOR THE PAST, PRESENT AND FUTURE STATE OF NETWORKS Patrick Bonk & Eland Afuang – Innovyze

VALIDATION OF HIGH RECOVERY WATER TREATMENT USING AN INTEGRATION OF ION EXCHANGE AND REVERSE OSMOSIS Sivan Iswaran – Clean TeQ Water

TRANSI Amanda Mark W

330

5

419

USING MACHINE LEARNING TO PREDICT PLANT ASSET PERFORMANCE Aaron Gillett – KBR

MONITORING THE PERFORMANCE AND HEALTH OF DUAL MEDIA FILTERS WITH LIVE DATA ANALYTICS Martin Harris – TRILITY

NEW TO RESILIE Jeffrey N

271

324

410

ENHANCED SEWER NETWORK MONITORING DEPLOYMENT Jessie Huang & Charles Swain – South East Water

IN SITU DOC ANALYSIS ALONG WITH PIGMENT FLUORESCENCE FOR ADVANCED BLOOM MONITORING AT DRINKING WATER TREATMENT PLANT Dr Sara Imran Khan – WaterNSW

PARTIC TENSIO Bao Anh Sydney

176

276

316

BUSINESS CONTINUITY THROUGH VIRTUAL SITE TOURS Glenn Harris – Western Water Tom Delaney – CH2M Beca

INNOVATIVE LOW-COST SOLUTION FOR THM REDUCTION AT ROSSLYNNE WTP Laura De Rango – GHD

COMMU QUEENS Dr Marti Amanda

22

329

225

ENTER THE MATRIX – USING VIRTUAL REALITY AND 360 DEGREE VIDEO TO IMPROVE STAKEHOLDER ENGAGEMENT Anthony Domanti – WSP Andrew Stevenson – Logan Water

ELECTRO-GENERATION OF FERRATE: A NOVEL APPROACH FOR ORGANIC MATTER REMOVAL AND DBP CONTROL Dr Pablo Ledezma – The University of Queensland

FLEXIBL PATHWA Alexand

P27/67

P31/281

INSIGHTS FROM CLEANING 46 FLOW DATA SETS Dr Gareth Williams – FSA Data

AVOIDING PREMATURE REDUNDANCY OF WATER TREATMENT ASSETS – CLARENCE VALLEY COUNCIL’S MODULAR ULTRAVIOLET DISINFECTION SYSTEM Greg Mashiah – Clarence Valley Council AFTERNOON TEA

PANEL 8

RIVERBANK ROOM 5

PANEL 9

Aurecon presents: FROM PANELS TO PARTNERS – HOW AUSTRALIAN WATER UTILITIES ARE SEEKING TO FOSTER CLOSER, MORE EFFICIENT WORKING RELATIONSHIPS

5:30pm–6:30pm

22

EXCELLENCE IN OPERATIONS, ASSET MANAGEMENT & PROJECT DELIVERY

RIVERBANK ROOMS 7 & 8

3:15pm–4:00pm

4:00pm–5:30pm

E

AUSTRALIAN WATER ASSOCIATION

ROOM L2 & 3

SA Water presents: ENERGY TRANSITION IN ACTION: CAPITALISING ON WATER ASSETS FOR A ZERO COST ENERGY FUTURE

HAPPY HOUR

WaterRA NEXT-G (PART 2 *See Da


Poster Pitch Presentation

Workshop/Panel

Technical/Case Study Presentation

Student Water Prize

Accent Speaker

Top 14 Papers

Workshop

Virtual Presentation

OUR PRINCIPAL SPONSOR

Panel

&

KEYNOTE SPEAKER SESSION | SIMON GRIFFITHS | TIM JARVIS AM

8:30am

MORNING TEA

10:00am

STREAM 3

STREAM 4

EXTREME EVENTS: RESPONSES, RECOVERY & FUTURE PLANNING

COMMUNITIES OF THE FUTURE

RESPONSE & PLANNING

CITY SCALE PLANNING

ROOM L2

ROOM L1

10:45am

Session Sponsor: P32/102

M

10:50am

ADAPTIVE PLAN FOR INTEGRATED WATER MANAGEMENT IN THE GREATER PARRAMATTA AND THE OLYMPIC PENINSULA Lydia Aristuti & Kris Kumaran – Sydney Water 245

MINE VS TION

LIMATE

10:55am

WATER LIVEABILITY NEXUS: HUNTER WATER’S NEW COLLABORATIVE APPROACH TO DEVELOPMENT PLANNING Dr Casey Furlong – GHD Tony McClymont – Hunter Water Corporation

PLEASE REFER TO THE ONLINE PLATFORM FOR PRESENTER DETAILS

284

236

CARE IN A CRISIS: UNITYWATER’S INTERNAL COMMUNICATIONS RESPONSE TO COVID-19 Rebecca Marshall – Unitywater

INTEGRATING RESEARCH FOR IMPROVED WATER SENSITIVE OUTCOMES FROM INFILL DEVELOPMENT Mellissa Bradley – Water Sensitive SA

11:20am

97

241

EXTREME DROUGHT PLANNING FOR URBAN WATER – THE DEVIL IS IN THE DETAIL Russell Beatty – Hydrology and Risk Consulting

OUTCOME DRIVEN APPROACH TO BALANCE COST AND PERFORMANCE IN THE BOLIVAR NORTH WASTEWATER MASTER PLAN Vaibhav Sankey – WSP Paul Premnath – SA Water

11:45am

12:10pm

ER

LUNCH

&

AN

EDIA

CE FOR TMENT

OR

12:15pm

RESILIENCE & WATER SECURITY

COMMUNITIES OF THE FUTURE

WATER RESILIENCE PLANNING

RESIDENTIAL

ROOM L2

ROOM L1

P33/106

P34/270

TRANSITIONING TO A WATER SENSITIVE REGENERATIVE CITY Amanda Chimkievitch & Raju Mangalam – Sydney Water Mark Wilton – Aurecon

TOWARDS A METHODOLOGY FOR A GREEN RATING SYSTEM FOR WATER INDUSTRY PRODUCTS Tashdid Tahmid – City West Water

419

100

NEW TOOL DRIVES INFORMED, DATA-DRIVEN DECISIONS FOR MORE RESILIENT WATER UTILITIES Jeffrey Newman & Leon van der Linden – SA Water

TANK TALK® SYSTEM AT AQUAREVO Ninad Dharmadhikari – South East Water

410

34

PARTICIPATORY, ADAPTIVE AND INTEGRATED URBAN WATER MANAGEMENT: TENSIONS AND POTENTIAL Bao Anh Nong – Institute for Sustainable Futures, University of Technology Sydney

BACK TO THE FUTURE? DECENTRALISED ALTERNATIVE WATER SUPPLIES: A CASE STUDY OF INNOVATION VS. REGULATION Dr Michael Lawrence – Bligh Tanner

316

139

COMMUNITY VALUES FOR WATER SECURITY IN URBAN SOUTH EAST QUEENSLAND Dr Martin van Bueren – Synergies Economic Consulting Amanda Binks – Seqwater

THE FUTURE OF AGILE PLANNING – GEOSPATIAL WATER PLANNING TOOL Andrew Foddy – GHD Suhanti Thirunavukarasu – Sydney Water

225

254

FLEXIBLE PLANNING FOR AN UNCERTAIN FUTURE - APPLYING ADAPTIVE PATHWAYS THINKING TO THE WATER SECTOR Alexandra Humphrey Cifuentes & Rosemary Jones – Frontier Economics

1:15pm

1:20pm

1:25pm

1:50pm

2:15pm

2:40pm

GENDER AND SOCIALLY INCLUSIVE PARTICIPATORY DESIGN OF WATERSENSITIVE COMMUNITIES IN INDONESIA AND FIJI Dr Naomi Francis – Monash Sustainable Development Institute

3:05pm

T OLET

ASSETS

AFTERNOON TEA PANEL 10

RIVERBANK ROOMS 3 & 4

3:15pm WORKSHOP 11

WaterRA presents: NEXT-GEN WASTEWATER-BASED EPIDEMIOLOGY | COLOSSOS AND BEYOND (PART 2) *See Day 1 Program for Part 1 of this session

RIVERBANK ROOMS 7 & 8

Yarra Valley Water/Pride in Water presents: CHANNELING LGBTIQ+ CHANGE IN THE AUSTRALIAN WATER INDUSTRY

4:00pm

HAPPY HOUR

OZWATER’21 Reimagining our Water Future | Kauwipira Yangadlitya Mukapapanthi |

5:30pm

23


5

Program

WEDNESDAY 5 MAY

Kauwipira Yangadlitya Mukapapanthi

8:30am–10:00am

KEYNOTE SPEAKER SESSION | SIMON GRIFFITHS | TIM JARVIS AM

10:00am–10:45am

MORNING TEA

10:45am–12:15pm

STREAM 5

STREAM 6

INDIGENOUS ENGAGEMENT

SAFEGUARDING COMMUNITY & ENVIRONMENTAL HEALTH

RIVERBANK ROOM 6

ENVIRONMENTAL HEALTH RIVERBANK ROOMS 3 & 4

10:50am–10:55am

10:55am–11:20am

11:20am–11:45am

S

11:45am–12:10pm

E IN

12:10pm–12:15pm

P35/347

P39/72

P42/420

ROELANDS VILLAGE WATER SUPPLY OPTIONS ASSESSMENT: SUCCESS THROUGH COLLABORATION AND RESPECT Sian Harrick – Arup

INNOVATIVE TOOLS NEEDED FOR MARKET-BASED NUTRIENT OFFSETTING Professor Michele Burford – Griffith University

ANAERO PLANTVishnu A

196

246

343

LOGAN CITY’S RECONCILIATION ACTION PLAN TESTED ON COMPLEX INFRASTRUCTURE Matthew Petersen – Logan Water Anthony Dillon – Danggan Balun (Five Rivers People)

DESTINATION ZERO: NUTRIENT OFFSETS TO ACHIEVE ZERO NET NUTRIENT EMISSIONS Catriona Sutcliffe & Scott Francis – Cardno

ZERO-E TREATM Dr Haor

320

282

337

WHERE’S OUR WATER?: A HUNTER WATER AWABAKAL AND WORIMI WATER STORY Kristy Ratcliffe – Hunter Water Corporation

ASSESSMENT AND MITIGATION OF GREENHOUSE GAS EMISSIONS FROM SLUDGE LAGOONS IN WASTEWATER TREATMENT Sarah Aucote – The University of Queensland

UPGRAD AUSTRA Brandon

85

138

1

HEALING RELATIONSHIPS WITH TRADITIONAL OWNERS IN THE EAST KIMBERLEY Jordin Payne – Water Corporation

ANALYSING SEWER FLOW PATTERNS TO DETECT BLOCKAGES AND OVERFLOWS Stephen Cheung – Sydney Water

BIOSOL Simon A

P36/129

P43/311

‘DUNYAK MOIRA’ - NEW LIFE AND COMMUNITY ROLE FOR MERRIGUM WTP Steven Nash – Goulburn Valley Water Corey Walker – Burnanga Indigenous Fishing Club

REAL TI DECARB Karen M

12:15pm–1:15pm

LUNCH

1:15pm–3:15pm

1:20pm–1:25pm

ER

1:25pm–1:50pm

INDIGENOUS ENGAGEMENT

LEADERSHIP, GOVERNANCE & STAKEHOLDER COLLABORATION

RIVERBANK ROOMS 3 & 4

RIVERBANK ROOM 2

P37/262

P40/218

P44/141

IMPLEMENTING AN ON-SITE DRINKING WATER MONITORING SYSTEM IN INDIGENOUS COMMUNITIES ACROSS CANADA Dr R. Stephen Brown – Queen’s University

INTEGRATING WATER AND URBAN PLANNING IN AUSTRALIA’S BIGGEST RELEASE AREA – HOW IT STARTED, AND HOW IT’S GOING Phillip Birtles – Sydney Water

ONE GIA GASIFIC Johanna Mark Th

219

AUSTRALIAN WATER INSTITUTIONAL REFORMS POST COVID-LAWS, GOVERNANCE AND JUSTICE FOR THE LONG TERM Professor Jennifer McKay – UniSA

THE GOVERNOR’S ABORIGINAL EMPLOYMENT INDUSTRY CLUSTERS CADETSHIP PROGRAM Jay Edmondson – PwC 1:50pm–2:15pm

ES: A

2:15pm–2:40pm

OOL

2:40pm–3:05pm

R-

Y

MAY

Reimagining our Water Future

3:05pm–3:10pm

155

62

19

BOTH WAYS LEARNING – PARTNERING WITH SCHOOLS TO DRIVE BEHAVIOUR CHANGE IN INDIGENOUS COMMUNITIES Patrick Naughtin – Atria Group Kylie Climie – Power and Water Corporation

EMBRACING IWM AS BUSINESS AS USUAL: CHALLENGES AND OPPORTUNITIES FROM A RETAIL WATER PERSPECTIVE Suresh Bajracharya – South East Water

SUSTAIN ALGAE Dr Andr

48

220

268

JOURNEY TO SUCCESSFUL ABORIGINAL PARTICIPATION IN NT REMOTE ABORIGINAL COMMUNITIES PROJECTS Teng Yik & Chantal Bramley – Power and Water Corporation

ENABLERS FOR RESILIENT CITY PLANNING AND MULTISTAKEHOLDER COLLABORATIVE PLANNING AROUND THE GLOBE Elaine Pang – Arup Grace Tjandraamatdja – Melbourne Water

BIOGUE RECOVE Dr Shao

82

195

244

ABORIGINAL CULTURAL STRENGTHS BRINGING TAILORED WATER LEARNING TO THE NORTH WEST Jordin Payne – Water Corporation

HOW GOVERNANCE HAS IMPROVED THE HEALTH OF THE DERWENT ESTUARY Ursula Taylor – Derwent Estuary Program

WATER OF CO-D Daniel C

P38/392

P41/162

RECONCILIATION: BUSINESS AS USUAL Rachael Nuttall – SUEZ

W-LAB SETS THE SCENE FOR INNOVATION IN ANZ Dr Alexandra Cech – Isle Utilities Dr Greg Ryan – Water Services Association of Australia Sarah Patterson – ThinkPlace

3:15pm–4:00pm

AFTERNOON TEA WORKSHOP/PANEL 12

4:00pm-5:30pm

PANEL 13

GHD presents: HOW ARE INDIGENOUS PEOPLE SUPPORTED AT WORK TO “WALK IN TWO WORLDS” AUTHENTICALLY

5:30pm–6:30pm

24

RIVERBANK ROOM 6

AUSTRALIAN WATER ASSOCIATION

RIVERBANK ROOM 2

Melbourne Water presents: TOGETHER: TACKLING HUMAN RIGHTS AND MODERN SLAVERY RISKS IN OUR SUPPLY CHAINS

HAPPY HOUR

AWA W WATER FUTURE


Poster Pitch Presentation

Workshop/Panel

Technical/Case Study Presentation

Student Water Prize

Accent Speaker

Top 14 Papers

Workshop

Virtual Presentation

Panel

KEYNOTE SPEAKER SESSION | SIMON GRIFFITHS | TIM JARVIS AM MORNING TEA STREAM 7

LTH

T

NET

IONS

S AND

OING

OUR PRINCIPAL SPONSOR

STREAM 8 WSAA SESSION 1

ACHIEVING A CIRCULAR ECONOMY

ROOM L3

WWTP/CARBON/ENERGY RIVERBANK ROOM 2

P42/420 ANAEROBIC CO-DIGESTION: A NOVEL SUBSTRATE ANALYSIS TOOL FOR PLANT-WIDE IMPACT QUANTIFICATION Vishnu Avudainayagam – Lewi Software Group Pty Ltd 343 ZERO-ENERGY SEWAGE TREATMENT: CARBON EFFICIENT SEWAGE TREATMENT AND ENHANCED BIOGAS RECOVERY Dr Haoran Duan – The University of Queensland

THE MANY FACES OF RESILIENCE: SESSION 1 10:45am–12:15pm Speakers: Adam Lovell Executive Director, WSAA

337 UPGRADING BIOGAS INTO GASEOUS ‘GOLD’… THE FUTURE OF BIOGAS IN AUSTRALIA Brandon Bloom – GHD

Roch Cheroux WSAA Chair and Managing Director, Sydney Water Alan Sutherland Chief Executive for the Water Industry Commission in Scotland

1 BIOSOLIDS & WASTEWATER REUSE – ACHIEVING A CIRCULAR ECONOMY Simon Aquilina – Central Gippsland Regional Water Authority

Lara Olsen WSAA Board Member and Managing Director, South East Water Neil Brennan CEO, Seqwater

P43/311 REAL TIME CARBON AND COST MANAGEMENT – DIGITAL DISRUPTION FOR DECARBONISATION Karen Miller – Wood LUNCH WSAA SESSION 2

ACHIEVING A CIRCULAR ECONOMY

ROOM L3

WWTP/CARBON/ENERGY RIVERBANK ROOM 6 P44/141 ONE GIANT LEAP: LESSONS LEARNED FROM AUSTRALIA’S FIRST BIOSOLIDS GASIFICATION PLANT Johanna Johnson – Logan Water Mark Thomas – Downer

-LAWS,

D

LOBE

RWENT

RY

PLEASE REFER TO THE ONLINE PLATFORM FOR PRESENTER DETAILS

THE MANY FACES OF RESILIENCE: SESSION 2 1:15pm–3:15pm

19

Speakers: Alan Sutherland Chief Executive for the Water Industry Commission in Scotland

SUSTAINABLE RENWABLE BIOGAS PRODUCTION FROM CO-DIGESTION OF ALGAE BIOMASS Dr Andrew Ward – The University of Queensland/ Urban Utilities

Anna Jackson General Manager, Strategy, Engagement and Innovation, SA Water

268

Stuart Wilson Deputy Executive Director, WSAA

BIOGUESS – TAKING THE GUESS WORK OUT OF CALCULATING ENERGY RECOVERY FROM BIOGAS Dr Shao Yap – Aurecon

Jason Devitt WSAA Board Member and Director Engineering and Commercial Infrastructure, Mackay Regional Council

244

Danielle Francis Manager Liveable Communities, WSAA

WATER UTILITIES’ ROLE IN A CIRCULAR ECONOMY: ECONOMIC ASSESSMENT OF CO-DIGESTION AT URBAN UTILITIES Daniel Culpitt – Synergies Economic Consulting

Kate Miles Head of Business, Systems and Assets Planning, Sydney Water

AFTERNOON TEA WORKSHOP 14

ROOM L1

AWA Water Quality Specialist Network presents: WATER QUALITY MONITORING AND ANALYSIS ON TAP: NOW AND INTO THE FUTURE HAPPY HOUR

OZWATER’21 Reimagining our Water Future | Kauwipira Yangadlitya Mukapapanthi |

25


6

Reimagining our Water Future

MAY

Program

THURSDAY 6 MAY

Kauwipira Yangadlitya Mukapapanthi

9:00am–10:30am

CLOSING CEREMONY | KEYNOTE SPEAKER SESSION | PROFESSOR VEENA SAHAJWALLA | TANYA HOSCH

10:30am–11:15am

MORNING TEA

11:15am–12:45pm

11:20am–11:25am

11:25am–11:50am

11:50am–12:15pm

12:15pm–12:40pm

12:40pm–12:45pm

STREAM 1

STREAM 2

STREAM 3

EXCELLENCE IN OPERATIONS, ASSET MANAGEMENT & PROJECT DELIVERY

EXCELLENCE IN OPERATIONS, ASSET MANAGEMENT & PROJECT DELIVERY

EXCELLENCE IN OPERATIONS, ASSET MANAGEMENT & PROJECT DELIVERY

WASTEWATER TREATMENT & RECYCLED WATER

SMART APPROACHES TO ASSET RESILIENCE

RIVERBANK ROOMS 7 & 8

RIVERBANK ROOMS 3 & 4

CURATED SESSION: GROUND-TRUTHING AC PIPE STRENGTH AND NEW APPROACHES TO EXTENDING PIPE LIFE RIVERBANK ROOM 5

P45/369

P49/119

MORE WATER, LESS BRINE IN MUNICIPAL AND INDUSTRIAL DESALINATION Hiep Le – Gradiant International Holdings Pte Ltd

DIGITALLY ENABLED ASSET CONDITION ASSESSMENT Tammy Falconer – KPMG

OPPORT THROUG YORK Elaine P

328

175

40

DISRUPTIVE WATER REUSE SCHEME BASED ON DIRECT ULTRAFILTRATION (DUF) OF MUNICIPAL WASTEWATER Kathy Northcott – Veolia

MOVING FROM A SEWERAGE SYSTEM CAPACITY STANDARD TO SPILL FREQUENCY STANDARD TO IMPROVE CUSTOMER OUTCOMES Tony Bamford & Ian Jennison – Stantec

TOXIC C REGION Jane Sto TRILITY

269

189

MEMBRANE CAPACITIVE DEIONIZATION (MCDI) FOR DESALINATION OF HIGH HARDNESS INDUSTRIAL WASTEWATER AND TREATED DOMESTIC WASTEWATER Clare Bales – University of New South Wales

DESIGN OF A BATTERY ENERGY STORAGE SYSTEM TO INCREASE SEWAGE PUMPING STATION RESILIENCE Jon Knott – University of Wollongong

298

147

ANAEROBIC AMMONIA REMOVAL (AAR) SUCCESS IN MAINSTREAM INDUSTRIAL WASTEWATER Dr Bronwen Butler – Johns Environmental Group Pty Ltd

TACKLING WASTEWATER NETWORK OVERFLOWS THROUGH MONITORING AND PROACTIVE INTERVENTION Luke Dix & Emily Hack – SA Water

P46/319

P50/64

INTELLIGENT AND DYNAMIC CONTROL OF OPTIMAL WWTP OPERATION FROM MICROBIAL SEQUENCING Grahame Simpson – Veolia Krüger

DON’T WASTE A BURST MAIN Pak Lum Lee – SMEC

12:45pm–1:45pm

1:55pm–2:20pm

2:20pm–2:45pm

2:45pm–3:10pm

3:10pm–3:15pm

Facilitator: James Gardner – Water Services Association of Australia Presenters: Kiran Gokal – WSP Dr Benjamin Shannon – Monash University Marjorie Valix – University of Sydney

WASTEWATER TREATMENT & RECYCLED WATER

EXCELLENCE IN OPERATIONS, ASSET MANAGEMENT & PROJECT DELIVERY

EXCELLENCE IN OPERATIONS, ASSET MANAGEMENT & PROJECT DELIVERY

RECYCLED WATER & POTABLE REUSE

BIOSOLIDS & ANAEROBIC DIGESTION

WILDCARD

RIVERBANK ROOMS 3 & 4

RIVERBANK ROOMS 7 & 8

RIVERBANK ROOM 6

234

NEW SO AT REG TREATM Scott Lo Unitywa 13

DOLICH SMELLY PLAIN S Dr Flore

P47/327

P51/143

P53/377

P56/166

INNOVATIVE PROCESS TO PRODUCE HIGH QUALITY RECLAIMED WATER FOR SMALL COMMUNITIES Kathy Northcott – Veolia

THE AUTOMATED TECTA SYSTEM FOR RAPID MONITORING OF E. COLI AND FAECAL COLIFORMS IN BIOSOLIDS Dr R. Stephen Brown – Queen’s University

THE BARREL, A DISRUPTIVE DESIGN FOR REVERSE OSMOSIS DESALINATION PLANTS Scott Murphy – Veolia Sidem

BASIN G AUSTRA MANAG RIVERS AUDIEN Melita G Futures,

294

263

253

128

CASE STUDY – BEENYUP ADVANCED WATER RECYCLING PLANT STAGE 2 – COMMISSIONING AND PERFORMANCE TEST OUTCOMES Lisa Chan – SUEZ

BIOCHAR PRODUCTION FROM BIOSOLIDS PYROLYSIS WITH NOVEL MOBILE REACTOR TECHNOLOGY Dr David Bergmann – South East Water

IMPROVING CUSTOMER OUTCOMES THROUGH INNOVATIVE TREATMENT OF UNPLEASANT ODOURS Jennifer Dreyfus – Allwater Heath Georgeff – SA Water

REGION A LIGHT Moira Ze John Ma Council

279

248

360

183

DIAGNOSIS OF FOULING ISSUES NEGATES THE NEED FOR COSTLY PREMATURE MEMBRANE REPLACEMENT Peter Gordon – Permeate Partners

SUSTAINABLE APPROACH TO DEVELOPMENT OF ST MARYS WRP BIOSOLIDS TREATMENT HUB Angus Wilkie – Aurecon

INNOVATION MAPPING: COMMUNICATING COMPLETE RESEARCH AND DEVELOPMENT PATHWAYS Erin Su – Urban Utilities

ACTION Caroline

193

83

17

409

LESSONS LEARNT FROM A DECADE OF WASTEWATER REUSE THROUGH MANAGED AQUIFER RECHARGE Dr Meena Yadav – Allwater Gretchen Marshall – SA Water

LIQUID INJECTION OF BIOSOLIDS – ALTERNATIVE TREATMENT PROCESS FOR PATHOGEN REDUCTION AT A WASTEWATER TREATMENT LAGOON PLANT Dr Aravind Surapaneni – South East Water

FOLLOW THE POLLUTION - REAL TIME DATA EXPOSING WATERWAY VANDALS Heath Baker – Melbourne Water

THE SSW PRIORIT FUNDIN UTILITIE Sascha M NSW De and Env

P48/308

P52/149

P54/78

KWINANA WATER RECLAMATION PLANT REVERSE OSMOSIS OPERATING MODES DURING ELEVATED FEEDWATER SALINITY EVENTS Eunice Hove – Water Corporation

TRIALLING LOW TEMPERATURE ANAEROBIC DIGESTION AT CHRISTIES BEACH WWTP Caroline Herman – Allwater

INNOVATIVE DECISION SUPPORT TOOL FOR 24/7 “TO DEMAND” OPERATION OF THE ADELAIDE DESALINATION PLANT Dr Lisa Blinco & Oliver Sanderson – SA Water

3:15pm

26

Facilitated by James Gardner (CRC-P Program Manager, Water Services Association of Australia), this curated session will involve a series of short presentations by four industry experts followed by a moderated Q&A session at the end.

P55/372

LUNCH

1:45pm–3:15pm

1:50pm–1:55pm

SCI

AUSTRALIAN WATER ASSOCIATION

CLOSING NETWORKING DRINKS


Poster Pitch Presentation

OUR PRINCIPAL SPONSOR

Technical/Case Study Presentation Accent Speaker Top 14 Papers Virtual Presentation

CLOSING CEREMONY | KEYNOTE SPEAKER SESSION | PROFESSOR VEENA SAHAJWALLA | TANYA HOSCH MORNING TEA

SSET ERY

STREAM 4

STREAM 5

STREAM 6

STREAM 7

RURAL, REMOTE & REGIONAL WATER

EXCELLENCE IN OPERATIONS, ASSET MANAGEMENT & PROJECT DELIVERY

RESILIENCE & WATER SECURITY

DELIVERING AN OUTSTANDING CUSTOMER EXPERIENCE

HING

SCIENCE BEHIND THE SCENE

ODOUR CONTROL

LIFE

ROOM L2

RIVERBANK ROOM 6

WATER SUPPLY AND CATCHMENT MANAGEMENT

CUSTOMER VALUE & WILLINGNESS TO PAY

ROOM L1

ROOM L3

P55/372

P57/361

P60/304

P64/168

OPPORTUNITIES FOR PROSPERITY THROUGH AGRICULTURE IN CAPE YORK Elaine Pang – Arup

ODOUR CONTROL FOR THE HOPPERS CROSSING PUMP STATION Gary Finke – CleanTeQ Aromatrix Pty Ltd

BENEFIT SHARING POTENTIAL IN THE GBM BASIN Mohammad Hossen – University of South Australia

WHAT MATTERS TO OUR CUSTOMERS BUILT OUR PLAN Jodi Slater – SA Water

40

101

273

114

TOXIC CYANOBACTERIA IN REGIONAL QUEENSLAND Jane Stokeld & Dr Soon Bee Quek – TRILITY

TACKLING THE PONG FROM WASTEWATER LAGOONS – THE WHYALLA WWTP STORY Mitch Laginestra – GHD Kat Reid – SA Water

SEASONAL STREAMFLOW FORECASTING FOR WATER SUPPLY PLANNING Dr David Robertson – CSIRO

DEMONSTRATING CUSTOMER WILLINGNESS TO PAY FOR DISCRETIONARY SERVICES IN TASMANIA Dr Jeremy Cheesman – Marsden Jacob Associates

234

237

301

291

NEW SOLUTION FOR OLD PROBLEMS AT REGIONAL AND REMOTE TREATMENT PLANTS Scott Lowe & Luisa Magalhaes – Unitywater

A BUG’S LIFE: LESSONS LEARNED IN ODOUR CONTROL AT A LARGE URBAN PUMP STATION Anthony Domanti – WSP

ASSESSMENT OF TAKE AND PROTECTION DURING FIRST FLUSH FLOWS IN THE NORTHERN BASIN Danielle Baker – NSW Department of Planning, Industry and Environment

DELIGHTING THE CUSTOMER: NAVIGATING THE TENSION BETWEEN CUSTOMER EXPERIENCE AND COST TO SERVE Celia Farnan – Unitywater

13

340

214

140

DOLICHOSPERMUM CRASSUM: THE SMELLY NEWCOMER OR HIDING IN PLAIN SIGHT? Dr Florence Choo – SA Water

ODOUR BASELINE INVESTIGATION AND CHEMICAL DOSING TRIALS AT LUGGAGE POINT RRC Niall Carey – SLR Consulting

WATER BANKING TO CREATE DROUGHT RESILIENCE FOR TOWN WATER SUPPLIES Dennis Gonzalez – CSIRO

ROUGH DIAMOND: HOW LOGAN RESIDENTS SAW BEAUTY IN A WASTEWATER TREATMENT PLANT Caitlin Gilbert & Tania Keelan – Downer Utilities Kate Thomas – Communikate

P58/66

P61/398

P65/90

GOOD VIBRATIONS AT POONA DAM: CYANOBACTERIA AND ASSOCIATED TASTE AND ODOUR METABOLITE CONTROL USING ULTRASOUND Renee Hague – Seqwater

AN INNOVATIVE APPROACH TO HYDRAULIC MODELLING PROVIDES A PRACTICAL SOLUTION FOR SUNBURY’S STORMWATER HARVESTING SCHEME Jane La Nauze & Dominic Murray-Fiume – Stantec

A GRASSROOTS APPROACH TO UNDERSTANDING AND VALUING COMMUNITY LIVEABILITY, NEEDS AND EXPECTATIONS William Speirs – Urban Utilities Thomas Swain – Aither Consulting

rogram f lve a dustry session

iation

sity

LUNCH

SSET ERY

FOR LANTS

OF

TING PMENT

E DATA

OL FOR HE

Water

RURAL, REMOTE & REGIONAL WATER

ACHIEVING A CIRCULAR ECONOMY

RESILIENCE & WATER SECURITY

COLLABORATION

RESOURCES RECOVERY

WATER SUPPLY AND AGRICULTURE

ROOM L2

ROOM L3

ROOM L1

P56/166

P59/313

P62/142

BASIN GUIDE: DRAWING ON AUSTRALIA’S EXPERIENCE MANAGING TRANSBOUNDARY RIVERS FOR AN INTERNATIONAL AUDIENCE Melita Grant – Institute for Sustainable Futures, University of Technology Sydney

BENEFITS OF BIOCHAR DERIVED FROM WASTEWATER BIOSOLIDS Robert Martinovic – Downer

“THE BEST DEVELOPMENT FOR THE REGION SINCE ELECTRICITY” DELIVERING THE SOUTH WEST LODDON PIPELINE PROJECT Graeme Dick – GWMWater

128

212

117

REGIONAL COLLABORATION SHINES A LIGHT ON CRITICAL ASSETS Moira Zeilinga – Clear Idea John Mann – Fraser Coast Regional Council

A CASE FOR SOURCING RECYCLED: RECOVERED GLASS SAND Dr Joel Edwards – Icon Water

LIFE DESEACROP PROJECT. A DESALINATION MODEL FOR SUSTAINABLE AGRICULTURE IN REGIONS WITH WATER STRESS. Marc Riera & Tom Ransome – SACYR Water

183

36

74

ACTION WITH AQUASSISTANCE Caroline Herman – Allwater

STRUVITE RECOVERY FROM WASTEWATER TREATMENT AND SEA WATER DESALINATION BY-PRODUCTS Irina Mouilleron – SUEZ

IRRIGATION NETWORK EFFICIENCY CRUCIAL FOR ENSURING SUSTAINABLE WATER RESOURCE Daniel Wagenaar – Xylem Water Solutions

409

302

397

THE SSWP AND BEYOND – PRIORITISING SUPPORT AND FUNDING FOR LOCAL WATER UTILITIES BASED ON RISK Sascha Moege & Nicholas Sutton – NSW Department of Planning, Industry and Environment

A SUSTAINABLE APPROACH FOR BACKFILLING SEWER TRENCHES USING RECYCLED MATERIALS Shalini Trikha – City West Water Ernie Gmehling – Ground Science

GROWING BUSINESS: INVESTING IN RECYCLED WATER INFRASTRUCTURE FOR FOOD SECURITY, ECONOMIC OUTCOMES, AND ENVIRONMENTAL BENEFITS Mike Butler – SA Water P63/251 USING DIGITAL SOLUTIONS TO MONITOR BORES, AQUIFERS AND BORE PUMPS Jennifer Dreyfus – Allwater

CLOSING NETWORKING DRINKS

OZWATER’21 Reimagining our Water Future | Kauwipira Yangadlitya Mukapapanthi |

27


Reimagining our Water Future

Workshop/Panel Program

Kauwipira Yangadlitya Mukapapanthi

Panel 3

(Tuesday 4 May)

Panel 10

| RIVERBANK ROOM 2 | SENTIS PRESENTS: DRIVING A POSITIVE SAFETY CULTURE: CREATING WORKPLACE CULTURES BASED ON TRUST, COLLABORATION AND A WILLINGNESS TO REPORT

| RIVERBANK ROOMS 3 & 4 |

| RIVERBANK ROOMS 3 & 4 |

Workshop 1

This workshop aims to equip participants with the data, knowledge, and skills to influence meaningful change in their business. Specifically, participants will: • Explore insights from two global research studies of up to 21,711 participants across industry, including utilities • Understand the risks of a public compliance culture and its impact on safety performance and discretionary effort, including how this relates to workers’ reluctance to report incidents and errors • Understand the role of leadership in driving a culture beyond compliance and encouraging accurate and timely reporting of incidents for learning and improvement • Learn how to improve safety culture maturity by creating trust, collaboration and a willingness to report • Discover a practical roadmap for setting your next cultural transformation project up for success.

AGENDA Part 1: Driving a Positive Safety Culture: Lessons from Industry Investment in safety culture is crucial. Even with the right equipment, experience, and systems, if your people lack the motivation to take responsibility for their own safety, it is not a question of if an incident will occur, but when. But in a landscape where 87% of utilities worksites operate within a negative or unhelpful safety culture, how do businesses unlock the next stage of their safety culture journey? In Part 1 of this workshop, we will explore the five critical opportunity areas to improve safety culture maturity and how to strategically address these to unlock the next stage in your safety culture journey. Part 2: Addressing Incident Under-reporting for Improved Safety Outcomes Accurate and timely reporting of safety incidents is a crucial component of a positive safety culture. These invaluable learning opportunities allow us to adapt, make improvements and prevent future injury. Yet, recent Australian data has found that on average, 31% of incidents go unreported and in some organisations this figure rises as high as 53%. And it is not just frontline workers failing to report; leaders and managers also under-report at alarming rates. In Part 2 of this workshop, we will explore the three key drivers of underreporting and how to strategically address each one to drive improved safety outcomes, along with key takeaways to push your safety culture in a positive direction.

WHO SHOULD ATTEND? Senior and executive leaders who want to shift their culture and maximise corporate results by using safety culture as an enabler for improved brand, productivity, and financial performance. Conference delegates seeking to improve productivity, reduce the cost of incidents and increase employee engagement with safety are also encouraged to attend. Facilitator: Ben Carnell, Principal Consultant, Sentis, Brisbane

Workshop 2 | ROOM L2 & 3 | DEPARTMENT FOR ENVIRONMENT AND WATER PRESENTS: WATER FOR GROWTH – DEFINING THE WATER SECTOR’S ROLE IN AUSTRALIA’S POST COVID ECONOMIC RECOVERY AND AS A FOUNDATION FOR FUTURE PROSPERITY Water is an essential ingredient for the nation’s future prosperity, particularly as the economy recovers from the impacts of COVID-19. All of Australia’s existing critical export focussed industries and future growth sectors are linked to a sustainable water future. Further, the global water industry is growing faster than most other areas of the economy and Australia is not currently capturing an appropriate share of this international market place. This workshop will provide an opportunity for water sector leaders to define a new future for water in Australia – one that where water is a core enabler for the nation’s economic agenda. The workshop will involve a number of keynote presentations on local, national and local water trends and opportunities, as well as an interactive forum designed to elicit an industry wide direction.

WHO SHOULD ATTEND? This session is recommended for water professionals and industry leaders who are interested in the future growth opportunities for the industry over the next decade. Facilitators: • The Hon Karlene Maywald, Managing Director of Maywald Consultants Pty Ltd, South Australian Water Ambassador, Ozwater’21 Co-Chair • Steve Morton, Manager, International Business, Department for Environment and Water

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AUSTRALIAN WATER ASSOCIATION

(Wednesday 5 May)

WATERRA PRESENTS: NEXT-GEN WASTEWATER-BASED EPIDEMIOLOGY | COLOSSOS AND BEYOND The ColoSSoS Project – Collaboration on Sewage Surveillance of SARS-CoV-2 – is a major national collaborative effort, that has seen experts in health, microbiology, laboratory testing and wastewater-based epidemiology (WBE) all come together to foster research and create positive impact throughout our communities. More than a year after Water Research Australia commenced the ColoSSoS Project to support the nation’s pandemic response, you can learn more about its impact, the research behind it and what it means for the future of wastewater-based epidemiology. Over two days WaterRA and a panel of experts will showcase the amazing work being conducted around the country and internationally on sewage surveillance for SARS-CoV-2. Session 1 will highlight the sewage sampling research, including passive sampling, genomic sequencing and interlaboratory trials. Session 2 will highlight how the collaboration and research has been implemented and adopted by industry, as well as capability building both nationally and internationally, with discussion focussed on industry impact and future application of WBE. Participants will have direct access to the experts that designed and implemented the ColoSSoS Project, and the water industry’s public health response to COVID-19. They will hear of real-life applications of sewage surveillance during a pandemic and will be able to share their organisation’s future WBE plans to receive expert feedback in an interactive Q&A session. Participant of the two panel sessions will be guided through 1) the research as it has developed through the pandemic, and 2) the adoption of research into the water industry and the pandemic response, through understanding the sampling, the value of operators, and navigating the analytical results into translation within an epidemiological context. Facilitator: Dr Kelly Hill, ColoSSoS Project Director, Water Research Australia Panellists: Part 1 (Tuesday 4 May) • Karen Rouse, CEO, Water Research Australia • Dr Nick Crosbie, Recycled Water & IWM Research Manager, Melbourne Water • Dr Kate Griffiths, Senior Molecular Biologist, National Measurement Institute • Associate Professor Aaron Jex, Lab Head, Population Health & Immunity Division, Walter & Eliza Hall Institute for Medical Research Part 2 (Wednesday 5 May) • Dr Kaye Power, Principal Strategic Public Health Advisor, Sydney Water • Dr Zenah Bradford-Hartke, Water Unit – Environmental Health Branch, NSW Health • Dr Alex Keegan, Manager Catchments, Wastewater and Environmental Science, SA Water • Dr Monica Nolan, Principal Public Health Officer, Wastewater Surveillance for SARS-CoV-2, Department of Health Victoria • Paul Smith, Head of International & Industry Programs, Australian Water Association • Dr Dan Deere, ColoSSoS Project Manager & Water, Sanitation and Hygiene (WASH) Consultant, Water Futures

Panel 4 | RIVERBANK ROOMS 7 & 8 | INTERNATIONAL WATER ASSOCIATION AUSTRALIA (IWAA) PRESENTS: LEADING GLOBAL PRACTICES IN RIVER BASIN MANAGEMENT The Leading Global Practices in River Basin Management panel will explore best-practices in governance, strategy, operations and community engagement in managing our rivers and connected basins. From a national and international perspective, leading practitioners will present the state of play in the challenges and successes in river basin management, while providing innovative ideas for future options. Moderating the session is Tom Mollenkopf, leading water advocate and policy advisor, and President-Elect of IWA. The session will feature Prof. Jane Doolan, Productivity Commissioner (Australia), Prof. Norbert Jardin, CEO, Ruhrverband (Germany) and invited speakers from Africa and the Asia-Pacific region. John Riddiford, Chair of the IWA’s Watershed and River Basin Specialist Group will summarise and close what should be a thought-provoking conversation. *IWA Australia (IWAA) is a branch committee of AWA and aims to connect the Australian water industry with the activities of the International Water Association (IWA). IWA is a non-profit organisation and knowledge hub for the global water sector that seeks to connect water professionals worldwide to find solutions to the world’s water challenges.


OUR PRINCIPAL SPONSOR

Facilitator: Tom Mollenkopf, Leading Water Advocate, Policy Advisor and President-Elect of IWA Panellists: • Prof. Jane Doolan, Commissioner at the Productivity Commission, Victoria • Prof. Norbert Jardin, CEO, Ruhrverband, Germany • John Riddiford, Chair of the IWA’s Watershed and River Basin Specialist Group • Inga Jacobs-Mata, Country Representative – South Africa, International Water Management Institute

WHO SHOULD ATTEND? • Water industry professionals involved in water resources and water infrastructure • Staff from government agencies involved in long-term growth planning and infrastructure prioritisation • Anyone with an interest in how Australia can secure future water supplies Facilitator Kathy Northcott, Research & Development Manager, Veolia Panellists • Dr David Cunliffe, Principal Water Quality Adviser, SA Health • Danielle Francis, Manager Liveable Communities, Water Services Association of Australia • Neil Brennan, CEO, Seqwater

Panel 5 | RIVERBANK ROOM 5 | AWA & Aurecon presents: INCORPORATING INDIGENOUS WORLD VIEW INTO OUR WATER FUTURE – PERSPECTIVES FROM AOTEAROA NEW ZEALAND AND AUSTRALIA The panel will describe their perspectives on incorporating the Indigenous world view in the context of water planning and infrastructure. From our New Zealand neighbours and Australian perspectives, our panellists will speak of the successes, learnings and opportunities for Indigenous knowledge and engagement to create a better water future. The audience will engage through facilitated table discussions to pose questions of the panel to explore the concepts, experience and opportunities for the future. Troy Brockbank and Gillian Blythe (Water New Zealand) will describe key concepts and values underpinning the Te Ao Māori (Māori world view), provide an overview of the legislative concept for Taumata Arowai, and how Water NZ is supporting members to give effect to Te Mana o Te Wai.

Panel 7 | RIVERBANK ROOM 6 | MELBOURNE WATER PRESENTS: HOW A LEADING DIVERSITY PRACTICE ENABLES US TO ‘REIMAGINE OUR WATER FUTURE’ This panel session aims to raise attendees awareness of the opportunities that a focus on Diversity, Equity and Inclusion provides for the water sector. This includes the strengths of genuine and authentic consultation to enable real change (illustrated through the example of our highly consultative strategy development process) and the opportunities that empowering diverse voices provide to reimagine our water future. We will raise attendees’ understanding of key initiatives and programs they can embed to deliver real change within their organisations and deliver outcomes for the community. If you want to know more about how diversity and inclusion enables innovation and improved problem-solving, and the steps you can take to embed diversity and inclusion into your business, come along to the ‘How a leading diversity practice enables us to Reimagine our Water Future’ panel, led by Melbourne Water’s Diversity and Inclusion team.

A perspective on Indigenous view of water and the environment and what hopes for Indigenous involvement in water planning and management. Rachael Siddall (formerly SA Water) and Clyde Rigney (SA Water) will speak about their journey to and aspirations for their fourth Reconciliation Action Plan which focuses on stretch goals that recognise and celebrate Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander cultures, build greater Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander participation in their workforce, improve customer and community relations with Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander communities and continue to improve water infrastructure and opportunities in Aboriginal communities. Facilitators: • Andreas Henschke, Water Practice Leader, Aurecon • Lisa Currie, Sydney Water Client Manager, Aurecon Panellists: • Troy Brockbank, (Te Rarawa, Ngāti Hine, Ngāpuhi), Board Member, Water New Zealand & Pou Ārahi – Māori Advisory Pattle Delamore Partners (PDP) • Gillian Blythe, CEO, Water New Zealand • Rachael Siddall, (formerly SA Water; currently Manager Corporate Affairs, BHP) • Clyde Rigney, Aboriginal Engagement and Reconciliation Adviser (SA Water)

Panel 6

The business benefits of workforce diversity are clear, with research linking workforce diversity and inclusive cultures with higher levels of engagement, job satisfaction, innovation, understanding of customers’ needs, reduced turnover, and improved business performance. Australia is facing increasingly complex problems relating to increased population size, the impacts of climate change and reduced water availability. The diverse experiences, approaches and perspectives of our people empower Melbourne Water to effectively respond to our changing work and environment, meet challenges, solve complex issues, and deliver innovative solutions for our community. This panel discussion will feature case studies and examples of leading practice diversity and inclusion initiatives. Discussion topics will include the strength of genuine consultation to enable real change, the role of diversity in procurement, and how diverse voices and perspectives contribute to reimagining our water future. We will raise attendees’ understanding of key initiatives and programs they can embed to deliver real change within their organisations and deliver outcomes for the community.

WHO SHOULD ATTEND?

| ROOM L1 | AWA WATER RECYCLING SPECIALIST NETWORK PRESENTS: PURIFIED RECYCLED WATER FOR DRINKING: THE NEED FOR A NATIONAL APPROACH? There is growing recognition that purified recycled water for drinking is a viable option for securing water supplies into the future. However, barriers remain in exploring and implementing PRWD schemes, including the lack of a national approach. With many parts of Australia facing a drying climate, growing populations, and insecure water supplies, PRWD as a largely untapped climate independent water source, links strongly to the theme of Reimagining our Water Future. Bringing together fresh perspectives from a diverse panel of industry experts, we will explore the opportunities and challenges influencing the implementation of PRWD in Australia. The session will consider the need for a long term and consistent national approach. Specifically, it will explore how it could be developed and adopted, potential advantages and disadvantages of a coordinated approach, as well as how local-specific perspectives and drivers can be incorporated. Considering the recent drought, the topic is a timely one as many organisations explore the role of recycled water as a water security measure.

The target audience includes Leaders, Human Resources and Diversity and Inclusion professionals, those involved with delivering services for the community, and anyone with a passion for human rights, social justice, equity and inclusion. If you want to know more about how diversity enables innovation and improved problem-solving, come along to this panel. Facilitator Jill Sears, Diversity and Inclusion Manager, Melbourne Water Panellists • Leon Egan, Director, Wara Paring • Dr Paul Satur, Lecturer/Researcher, Water Sensitive Cities, MSDI Water, Monash Sustainable Development • Leanne Hill, Strategic Procurement Manager, Melbourne Water • Tara Zwaans, Senior Advisor Diversity and Inclusion, People and Capability, Melbourne Water

Australia has been recycling water for decades, however we have limited the ways we use it, and slow to embrace PRWD. Why? Wider scale implementation of PRWD using wastewater and stormwater can provide a sustainable, climate independent source of water. But what does it look like and how do we get there? This panel discussion aims to build on the workshop at Ozwater’19 “Is Australia ready to drink recycled water?” by continuing the conversation and exploring the strategies needed to progress the journey forward. After hearing from the panel, consisting of regional and metropolitan water utilities, regulators, government bodies and industry associations, there will be a facilitated Q&A discussion between panellists and attendees.

OZWATER’21 Reimagining our Water Future | Kauwipira Yangadlitya Mukapapanthi |

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Reimagining our Water Future

Workshop/Panel Program

Kauwipira Yangadlitya Mukapapanthi

Panel 8 | RIVERBANK ROOM 5 | AURECON PRESENTS: FROM PANELS TO PARTNERS – HOW AUSTRALIAN WATER UTILITIES ARE SEEKING TO FOSTER CLOSER, MORE EFFICIENT WORKING RELATIONSHIPS This panel discussion will explore the recent trend among many of the major Australian water utilities away from planning, engineering, and capital delivery panels with multiple service providers towards a more partnering approach. It will unpack the value opportunity behind true collaboration and creating a more outcomes-focussed working environment. The session will address two key topics: why adopt a partnering approach and how to partner successfully. Session participants will work together with the panellists to unpack these two areas:

WHY PARTNER? Historically, much of the planning and engineering support has been provided through panels of service providers, with two or more short-listed companies or consortia competitively tendering for work delivered through the panel arrangement. This approach can become contractual and transactional, driving behaviours that limit the ability to question overall objectives, whether the best outcomes will be achieved and the ability to be adaptive as new challenges arise. Many utilities have now taken a partnering approach where one or at most two suppliers deliver the work through integrated delivery teams working full-time for the utility, typically embedded in the same office. Topic areas will include: • Delivering on vision and strategy through shared understanding • Driving efficiency through integrated delivery teams • Co-creating project needs/objectives/approach to drive better customer outcomes • Breaking down the silos between strategy/planning and capital delivery • Partnering models, why they were selected, and suggested improvements

HOW TO PARTNER SUCCESSFULLY? Developing true partnerships takes time and effort. A critical element is driving a common culture, with all organisations learning from each other. In successful partnerships, the benefits of truly collaborating go beyond the obvious: • Skills and capability development opportunities for all staff through open knowledge sharing leads to greater employee satisfaction • Improved job satisfaction through working collaboratively can improve staff retention The panellists will be asked to reflect on their partnering journey to date, some more mature than others (ranging from 1 to 3 or more years), in terms of what has worked well, what has been challenging, how long it takes to transition and is it starting to achieve the intended outcomes. The panellists will represent some of the major utilities around Australia (such as Sydney Water, SA Water, Urban Utilities, Hunter Water), a Cultural Change specialist, chaired by Julian Briggs from Aurecon who will bring experience of working collaboratively in several alliances and partnerships, sharing insights into how true collaboration can achieve exceptional outcomes. Facilitator: Julian Briggs, Design Director, Water & Waste Water Treatment, Aurecon Panellists: • Amanda Lewry, General Manager Asset Operations and Delivery, SA Water • Kate Miles, Head of Systems & Asset Planning, Sydney Water • Joseph Otter, Manager - Integrated Engineering Services, Integrated Solutions, Urban Utilities • Ryan Leon, Capital Works Industry Partnerships Manager, Yarra Valley Water • Boris Ninkovic, General Manager for SA & QLD, Fulton Hogan Utilities • Kevin Werksman, Global Water Leader, Aurecon • Robert Holmes, Lead, People and Change, Aurecon

Panel 9 | ROOM L2 & 3 | SA WATER PRESENTS: ENERGY TRANSITION IN ACTION: CAPITALISING ON WATER ASSETS FOR A ZERO COST ENERGY FUTURE The water industry is energy intensive, consuming approximately 3,000 gigawatt hours of electricity annually, for which utilities pay an estimated combined average of $250 million per annum. Australia’s geography and climate drive these energy requirements, with the vast distances of our networks increasing pumping requirements, and our dry climate necessitating additional treatment to overcome source water challenges or even turn seawater into fresh. SA Water’s energy management program is capitalising on a water utility’s unique position within the market and demonstrating the way renewable energy can help our transition to a lower carbon economy, in a way that will deliver benefits for both customers and the environment. This session will explore the opportunities and challenges involved with developing a diversified energy portfolio at utility scale, drawing on the expertise of public and private sector organisations from a range of industries.

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AUSTRALIAN WATER ASSOCIATION

WHO SHOULD ATTEND? While water professionals understand the roles and influences of energy management on water services, the session will be approachable for all levels of existing knowledge. Among those who will be interested by this session are: Operations Control professionals, Production and Treatment professionals, Environmental Management professionals, Asset Management professionals, Capital Delivery professionals and IT Systems design, delivery and integration professionals. Facilitator/Panellists: • Nicola Murphy, Senior Manager, Zero Cost Energy Future, SA Water • Ashley Nicholls, Energy Portfolio Manager, SA Water • Peter Makris, Technical Director, Aurecon • Ben Lewis, Program Director, Zero Cost Energy Future infrastructure • Leon Cocchiaro, Project Director, Enerven • Robert May, Energy Systems and Optimisation Specialist, SA Water • Milorad Zecevic, PLEXOS

Workshop 11 | RIVERBANK ROOMS 7 & 8 | YARRA VALLEY WATER/PRIDE IN WATER PRESENTS: CHANNELING LGBTIQ+ CHANGE IN THE AUSTRALIAN WATER INDUSTRY Pride in Water has a vision for an Australian water industry where all LGBTIQ+ people feel safe, included and valued. It is an alliance of people and organisations which connects LGBTIQ+ people and allies working in the water industry throughout Australia. Our shared purpose is to create a more inclusive water industry for LGBTIQ+ staff, contractors, customers and our broader community. This workshop will be an immersive experience for attendees as we facilitate the use of root cause analysis methods (such as the Ishikawa method) to collaboratively identify issues, problems and concerns with LGBTIQ+ inclusion in our industry as well as facilitating conversations and brainstorms on possible industry approaches to tackle these issues. Attendees will be asked to share their lived experience as members of the LGBTIQ+ community or passionate allies in regards to what LGBTIQ+ inclusion means to them and how Pride in Water can assist in achieving this in our industry. This discussion will facilitate a much needed conversation in our industry around the importance of LGBITQ+ inclusion and provides a guided approach to how individuals and organisations can contribute to making our industry a place where LGBTIQ+ people feel safe, included and valued. Pride in Water wants to utilise this opportunity to bring LGBTIQ+ inclusion to the largest stage in our national industry and invite as many people as we can to the table to continue the work we have done and to affect change in our industry. Only a forum like OzWater will enable to connectivity, diversity of representatives and platform that is required to fully understand the needs and requirements of the LGBTIQ+ community across Australia. The information gathered in this workshop will then form a key foundation for Pride in Water to deliver on the needs of the industry but will also empower a large range of individuals to become change champions in their own organisations, something which is vital to support the overall success of Pride in Water. The workshop will emulate the Channeling Change program run by the AWA and will ensure its outcomes align to the broader vision of what the AWA is trying to achieve with Chanelling Change as well as helping attendees realise how LGBTIQ+ inclusion can help us to reimagine our water future.

WHO SHOULD ATTEND? In this workshop, Pride in Water hopes to receive the input of a diverse range of individuals and organisations to ensure the level of support and guidance it offers is fit for purpose and ensures that all organisations have an achievable pathway to LGBTIQ+ inclusion in their workplaces. Water professionals who are part of the LGBTIQ+ industry or passionate allies are encouraged to attend to share their experiences regardless of their profession in the industry. Diversity and Inclusion is not just a matter for Human Resources teams, it affects us all. Facilitator/Panellists: • Brendan Moore, Co-Founder of Pride in Water, Manager of Recycled Water Planning and Compliance at Yarra Valley Water • Jacquie Moon, Co-Founder of Pride in Water, Senior Graphic Designer at Yarra Valley Water • Sandra Hall, General Manager of the Advanced Water Management Centre at The University of Queensland

Workshop/Panel 12 | RIVERBANK ROOM 6 | GHD PRESENTS: HOW ARE INDIGENOUS PEOPLE SUPPORTED AT WORK TO “WALK IN TWO WORLDS” AUTHENTICALLY Australia sits at a key moment in our shared history, with awareness of the need to learn from the past and create a safer, sustainable, and more inclusive future for Indigenous people. The water sector is in a unique position to advance the social outcomes for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people, through our nationwide footprint and shared responsibility to provide fundamental services to all Australians. Closing the Gap in social outcomes


OUR PRINCIPAL SPONSOR

between Indigenous and non-Indigenous Australians requires leadership to reimagine our future workplaces, to embed participation, employment, and cultural safety. The ‘Walking in Two Worlds’ workshop aims to unpack how organisations can build an authentically inclusive workplace and allow their Indigenous staff to flourish. With greater emphasis on participation in the workforce and involvement in major projects, organisations are increasingly held accountable to measurable targets for Aboriginal participation. Why do some organisation flourish in setting and meeting these targets, while others fall well short of achieving the basic minimum requirements? With demand outweighing supply when it comes to Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander, a regular challenge for many organisations is the attraction, recruitment and retention of high calibre Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander staff. This session will explore topics such as attraction, recruitment and retention of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander staff, workplace safety and managing cultural loading. By sharing personal experiences and insights from research in a workshop format designed to share lessons, we hope participants will take the lead to support culturally safe workplaces for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people.

Taking action to combat modern slavery makes good business sense. Entities that take action to combat modern slavery in their operations and supply chains can protect against possible business harm and improve the integrity and quality of their supply chains.

WHO SHOULD ATTEND? • Procurement and contract managers • Risk and compliance managers • Sustainability managers • Diversity and inclusion representatives • Legal representatives • All levels of suppliers to the water industry • Engineers/project managers • Executive level leaders and board members • Safety representatives • Finance partners Facilitator: Leanne Hill, Strategic Procurement Manager, Melbourne Water

This session is aimed at individuals who have a role in building a culturally safe workplace for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people. We see this as especially relevant to managers of workplaces, HR professionals, project leads, and members of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander community.

Panellists: • Jean-Louis Haie, Associate Director, KPMG & Banarra Human Rights and Social Impact Services • Peter Morison, Chief Executive Officer, VicWater • Les Johnson, Manager Corporate Contracts & Projects, Wannon Water • Emma Braun, General Counsel and Company Secretary, Melbourne Water

Facilitator: Andrew Olsen, Indigenous Engagement Lead, GHD

Workshop 14

Panellists: • Lindsey Brown, Water Market Leader – Victoria, GHD • Nareen Young, Industry Professor, Indigenous Policy (Indigenous Workforce Diversity), Jumbunna Institute of Indigenous Education and Research, University of Technology Sydney • Rachelle Towart OAM, Founder and CEO, Pipeline Talent Pty Ltd • Associate Professor Bradley Moggridge, Indigenous Water Science, University of Canberra

| ROOM L1 |

WHO SHOULD ATTEND?

AWA WATER QUALITY SPECIALIST NETWORK PRESENTS: WATER QUALITY MONITORING AND ANALYSIS ON TAP: NOW AND INTO THE FUTURE The quality of water plays a vital role in health aspect of all living beings. From the water we drink, to the water that ends up in the ocean, the local waterway or is reused. From rainwater collected on our rooves, to stormwater that we want to collect. Out in the field, in a storage tank, in the network or at a treatment plant, monitoring and analysis provide the objective evidence necessary to make sound decisions on managing water quality.

Panel 13

The industry is awash with experiences and expertise in the water quality monitoring and analysis space. New problems and old problems; new solutions and old solutions; what works and what doesn’t…there are many stories to share and often they are not isolated cases.

| RIVERBANK ROOM 2 | MELBOURNE WATER PRESENTS: TOGETHER: TACKLING HUMAN RIGHTS AND MODERN SLAVERY RISKS IN OUR SUPPLY CHAINS Since 2017, Victorian Water Corporations have been collaborating to manage environmental and social issues in their supply chains. The VicWater ‘Social Procurement Working Group’ (SPWG) was established and, with the support of KPMG Banarra, has taken a united approach to making sustainable and ethical purchasing decisions. With the publication of the Modern Slavery Act 2018, Water Corporations with consolidated annual revenues above $100M are required to produce an annual statement on how they manage modern slavery risks in their operations and supply chains. The Working Group is excited to present their insights on the collaborative program of work they have implemented in FY20-21 around human rights and modern slavery, including: • Developing a procurement toolkit to assess and manage human rights risks, including modern slavery, in their Request for Tenders and contracts; • Undertaking a number of pilot procurement projects on high risk products and services with the support of KPMG Banarra and the Cleaning Accountability Framework; • Organising and facilitating an industry virtual forum to explore how Water Corporations across Australia could collaborate to evaluate and support suppliers on human rights issues. This panel session will be highly interactive and practical, responding to burning questions that are very relevant to most Australian Water Corporations and to suppliers in the water industry. The panel will not only build awareness of risks of modern slavery in the supply chain but will provide a leading best practice approach to taking positive action for this complex legal and ethical issue. The Associate Director of KPMG Banarra, Human Rights and Social Impact Services, will share their global expertise to provide the must know basics in the Commonwealth Governments Modern Slavery Act (Cth) 2018. As leading experts in this field you will hear of important updates and trends around Modern Slavery. The diverse panel including Vic Water and members of the SPWG will share the sectors learning and discuss typical challenges faced by the sector such as metro versus regional implications. With improved awareness and understanding across the water sector we seek to find opportunities to do things better and to collaborate. The ripple effect of this legislation will cascade to all levels of suppliers as we aim to increase transparency and due diligence of tendering and contracting processes. Modern Slavery Statements are being published in the Department of Home Affairs online registry. Driven initially by a governance requirement, this is an opportunity to demonstrate leadership and maintain reputational expectations of our customers and the community.

This workshop session, run by AWA Water Quality Monitoring and Analysis Specialist Network, aims to connect people through the sharing of stories. Sometimes the wheel does not need to be reinvented when we are up against a problem, it just needs to be reimagined. With the right people in a network, this reimagining can become reality. The key is building that water quality network of your own to provide “on tap” support and knowledge when issues arise. • That’s not an algal bloom, this is an algal bloom! What can an experience with an eight-year-old algal bloom in Mt Isa lend? • How do we prepare for regulatory changes when we don’t know what to expect or when to expect them? Health-Based Targets and Disinfection ByProducts; what do they mean and what can we do now? • How can smart data analytics and/or machine learning work for us? • What can be done to recover after a drought? Does water quality ever go back to “normal”? • When everything is on fire, how can you keep making safe drinking water? Join us for a story telling session followed by an opportunity to connect with others with shared experiences and interests. Come and share your story or ask that burning question. Celebrate the birthday of an algal bloom (hopefully with cake) and walk away with some new members in your own water quality network.

WHO SHOULD ATTEND? The workshop will be aimed at those involved or just even interested water quality in all areas of the water industry (e.g. drinking water, reuse, wastewater, asset management/maintenance, catchment management, waterways management, research, regulatory and technology). As this workshop is being run by the AWA Water Quality Specialist Network, this is a great opportunity for the network members to meet face-to-face, as well as strengthening our membership with new faces. Facilitator: Sally Williamson, Lead Process Engineer, Aurecon Panellists: • Tania Strixner-Harvey, Operations Superintendent, Mt Isa Water Board • Chris Chow, Professor of Water Science and Engineering, UniSA • Yulia Shutova, Treatment Process Advisor, Sydney Water • ASM Mohiuddin, Process Manager – Water, Sydney Water

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Our Ozwater’21 Presenters

Reimagining our Water Future Kauwipira Yangadlitya Mukapapanthi

Each Poster Pitch Presentation has one A1 Technical Poster displayed in the Exhibition Hall. The Technical Posters can be identified by Poster ID (starting with P). First Name

Last Name

Organisation

Presentation Type

Presentation/Poster ID

Eland

Afuang

Innovyze

Poster Pitch Presentation

P26/353

Michelle

Aguilar

Vapar

Technical/Case Study Presentation

288

Amie

Aldred

WSP

Technical/Case Study Presentation

144

Lisa

Andersons

MidCoast Council

Technical/Case Study Presentation

185

Simon

Aquilina

Central Gippsland Regional Water Authority

Technical/Case Study Presentation

1

Dr Lydia

Aristuti

Sydney Water

Poster Pitch Presentation & Technical/Case Study Presentation

P32/102 & 405

Sarah

Aucote

University of Queensland

Technical/Case Study Presentation

282

Vishnu

Avudainayagam

Lewi Software Group Pty Ltd

Poster Pitch Presentation

P42/420

Suresh

Bajracharya

South East Water

Technical/Case Study Presentation

62

Heath

Baker

Melbourne Water

Technical/Case Study Presentation

17

Danielle

Baker

NSW Department of Planning, Industry and Environment

Technical/Case Study Presentation

301

Clare

Bales

University of New South Wales

Technical/Case Study Presentation

269

Tony

Bamford

Stantec

Technical/Case Study Presentation

175

Scott

Barnes

Grenof

Technical/Case Study Presentation

133

Russell

Beatty

Hydrology and Risk Consulting

Technical/Case Study Presentation

97

Dr Quentin

Bechet

Veolia

Technical/Case Study Presentation

278 & 288

Dr David

Bergmann

South East Water

Technical/Case Study Presentation

263

Christopher

Best

Bega Valley Shire Council

Technical/Case Study Presentation

285

Amanda

Binks

Seqwater

Technical/Case Study Presentation

316

Phillip

Birtles

Sydney Water

Poster Pitch Presentation

P40/218

Dr Lisa

Blinco

SA Water

Poster Pitch Presentation

P54/78

Brandon

Bloom

GHD

Technical/Case Study Presentation

337

Jessica Maria

Bohorquez Arevalo

The University of Adelaide

Student Water Prize

SWP06

Patrick

Bonk

Innovyze

Poster Pitch Presentation

P26/353

Ed

Boxall

Sensorem

Technical/Case Study Presentation

70

Mellissa

Bradley

Water Sensitive SA

Technical/Case Study Presentation

236

Chantal

Bramley

Power and Water Corporation

Technical/Case Study Presentation

48

Jodie

Bricout

Lifecycles

Technical/Case Study Presentation

153

Julian

Briggs

Aurecon

Poster Display Only

P79

Dr R. Stephen

Brown

Queen's University

Poster Pitch Presentation

P37/262 & P51/143

Professor Michele

Burford

Griffith University

Poster Pitch Presentation

P39/72

Dr Bronwen

Butler

Johns Environmental Group Pty Ltd

Technical/Case Study Presentation

298

Mike

Butler

SA Water

Technical/Case Study Presentation

397

Paul

Byleveld

NSW Health

Accent Speaker

Niall

Carey

SLR Consulting

Technical/Case Study Presentation

340

Dr Alexandra

Cech

Isle Utilities

Poster Pitch Presentation

P41/162

Lisa

Chan

SUEZ

Technical/Case Study Presentation

294

Edwina

Chapman

Allwater

Technical/Case Study Presentation

381

Dr Jeremy

Cheesman

Marsden Jacob Associates

Technical/Case Study Presentation

114

Stephen

Cheung

Sydney Water

Technical/Case Study Presentation

138

Amanda

Chimkievitch

Sydney Water

Poster Pitch Presentation

P33/106

Dr Florence

Choo

SA Water

Technical/Case Study Presentation

13

Alexandra Humphrey

Cifuentes

Frontier Economics

Technical/Case Study Presentation

225

Kylie

Climie

Power and Water Corporation

Technical/Case Study Presentation

155

Venkat

Coimbatore

Water Corporation

Technical/Case Study Presentation

70

David

Cook

SA Water

Technical/Case Study Presentation

404

Daniel

Culpitt

Synergies Economic Consulting

Technical/Case Study Presentation

244

James

Curtis

Cardno

Poster Pitch Presentation

P2/318

Laura

De Rango

GHD

Technical/Case Study Presentation

276

Paul

de Sa

Sydney Water

Poster Pitch Presentation

P14/194

Kellie

De Waal

Hunter Water Corporation

Technical/Case Study Presentation

393

Tom

Delaney

CH2M Beca

Technical/Case Study Presentation

176

Ninad

Dharmadhikari

South East Water

Technical/Case Study Presentation

100

Graeme

Dick

GWMWater

Poster Pitch Presentation

P62/142

Anthony

Dillon

Danggan Balun (Five Rivers People)

Technical/Case Study Presentation

196

Luke

Dix

SA Water

Technical/Case Study Presentation

147

Anthony

Domanti

WSP

Technical/Case Study Presentation

22 & 237

Peter

Donaghy

Urban Utilities

Technical/Case Study Presentation

277

Jennifer

Dreyfus

Allwater

Poster Pitch Presentation & Technical/Case Study Presentation

P63/251 & 253

Dr Haoran

Duan

The University of Queensland

Technical/Case Study Presentation

343

Peter

Ebenwaldner

AWMA Water Control Solutions

Poster Display Only

P72

Jay

Edmondson

PwC

Technical/Case Study Presentation

219

Dr Joel

Edwards

Icon Water

Poster Pitch Presentation & Technical/Case Study Presentation

P18/182 & 212

Dr Lisa

Ehrenfried

Yarra Valley Water

Technical/Case Study Presentation

153

Tammy

Falconer

KPMG

Poster Pitch Presentation

P49/119

32

AUSTRALIAN WATER ASSOCIATION


OUR PRINCIPAL SPONSOR

Dr Ali

Farhat

GHD

Poster Pitch Presentation

P17/358

Celia

Farnan

Unitywater

Technical/Case Study Presentation

291

Gary

Finke

CleanTeQ Aromatrix Pty Ltd

Poster Pitch Presentation

P57/361

Ben

Fitzgerald

SA Water

Technical/Case Study Presentation

86

Maxime

Florin

Seureca Veolia

Poster Display Only

P74

Andrew

Foddy

GHD

Technical/Case Study Presentation

139

Andrew

Foley

Locusview

Poster Display Only

P73

Toyah

Foote

Seqwater

Technical/Case Study Presentation

266

Daniel

Ford

Allwater

Technical/Case Study Presentation

376

Scott

Francis

Cardno

Technical/Case Study Presentation

246

Dr Naomi

Francis

Monash Sustainable Development Institute

Technical/Case Study Presentation

254

Laura

Fuhrman

Icon Water

Poster Pitch Presentation

P9/417

Dr Casey

Furlong

GHD

Technical/Case Study Presentation

245

James

Gardner

Water Services Association of Australia

Poster Pitch Presentation & Curated Panel

P25/188 & Curated Panel Session

Peter

Gee

Water Services Association of Australia

Technical/Case Study Presentation

95

Heath

Georgeff

SA Water

Technical/Case Study Presentation

253

Andrea

Georgiou

Charles Darwin University

Student Water Prize

SWP04

Brent

Gibbs

Downer Utiltiies, Logan Water Partnership

Technical/Case Study Presentation

203

Caitlin

Gilbert

Downer Utilities

Technical/Case Study Presentation

140

Aaron

Gillett

KBR

Technical/Case Study Presentation

330

Anna

Giudice

Water Corporation

Technical/Case Study Presentation

103

Ernie

Gmehling

Ground Science

Technical/Case Study Presentation

302

Kiran

Gokal

WSP

Poster Display Only & Curated Panel

P69 & Curated Panel Session

Dennis

Gonzalez

CSIRO

Technical/Case Study Presentation

214

James

Goode

Water Services Association of Australia

Technical/Case Study Presentation

335

Tony

Goodhew

Logan Water

Technical/Case Study Presentation

146

Camilla

Goodwin

SA Water

Technical/Case Study Presentation

96

Peter

Gordon

Permeate Partners

Technical/Case Study Presentation

279

Melita

Grant

Institute for Sustainable Futures, University of Technology Sydney

Poster Pitch Presentation & Technical/Case Study Presentation

P56/166 & 160

Associate Professor Jianhua

Guo

The University of Queensland

Technical/Case Study Presentation

421

Emily

Hack

SA Water

Technical/Case Study Presentation

147

Renee

Hague

Seqwater

Poster Pitch Presentation

P58/66

Nathan

Hallam

Utilita Water Solutions

Poster Display Only

P76

Sian

Harrick

Arup

Poster Pitch Presentation

P35/347

Kate

Harriden

Australian National University

Student Water Prize

SWP05

Martin

Harris

TRILITY

Technical/Case Study Presentation

5

Glenn

Harris

Western Water

Technical/Case Study Presentation

176

Monica

Heinrich

Sydney Water

Technical/Case Study Presentation

210

Caroline

Herman

Allwater

Poster Pitch Presentation & Technical/Case Study Presentation

P52/149 & 183

Mohammad

Hossen

University of South Australia

Poster Pitch Presentation

P60/304

Eunice

Hove

Water Corporation

Poster Pitch Presentation

P48/308

Jessie

Huang

South East Water

Technical/Case Study Presentation

271

Jamilla

Hull

Melbourne Water

Poster Display Only

P68

Ben

Hutchinson

Downer

Technical/Case Study Presentation

264

Farshad

Ibrahimi

Isle Utilities

Technical/Case Study Presentation

335

Dr Sara

Imran Khan

WaterNSW

Technical/Case Study Presentation

324

Dr Michelle

Irvine

SA Water

Technical/Case Study Presentation

32

Sivan

Iswaran

Clean TeQ Water

Poster Pitch Presentation

P30/296

Ian

Jennison

Stantec

Technical/Case Study Presentation

175

Johanna

Johnson

Logan Water

Poster Pitch Presentation

P44/141

Rosemary

Jones

Frontier Economics

Technical/Case Study Presentation

225

Kirsty

Jones

Hunter Water Corporation

Poster Pitch Presentation & Technical/Case Study Presentation

P12/52 & 61

Catherine

Jones

PwC

Poster Pitch Presentation

299

Gemma

Keane

Aurecon

Technical/Case Study Presentation

216

Tania

Keelan

Downer Utilities

Technical/Case Study Presentation

140

Nina

Kennewell

Aurecon

Poster Pitch Presentation

P6/112

Jon

Knott

University of Wollongong

Technical/Case Study Presentation

189

Steve

Kotz

SA Water

Poster Pitch Presentation

P15/33

Kris

Kumaran

Sydney Water

Poster Pitch Presentation

P32/102

Jane

La Nauze

Stantec

Poster Pitch Presentation

P61/398

Mitch

Laginestra

GHD

Technical/Case Study Presentation

101

Jethro

Laidlaw

Power and Water Corporation

Technical/Case Study Presentation

408

Dr Paul

Lamble

Peak Water Consulting

Poster Pitch Presentation

P12/52

Dr Michael

Lawrence

Bligh Tanner

Technical/Case Study Presentation

34

Hiep

Le

Gradiant International Holdings Pte Ltd

Poster Pitch Presentation

P45/369

Dr Pablo

Ledezma

The University of Queensland

Technical/Case Study Presentation

329

Mark

Lee

Central Coast Council

Technical/Case Study Presentation

164

Pak Lum

Lee

SMEC

Poster Pitch Presentation

P50/64

OZWATER’21 Reimagining our Water Future | Kauwipira Yangadlitya Mukapapanthi |

33


Our Ozwater’21 Presenters

Reimagining our Water Future Kauwipira Yangadlitya Mukapapanthi

Jarrad

Legg

Yarra Valley Water

Poster Pitch Presentation

P19/200

Todd

Lowe

Allwater

Poster Display Only

P77

Scott

Lowe

Unitywater

Technical/Case Study Presentation

234

Luisa

Magalhaes

Unitywater

Technical/Case Study Presentation

234

David

Maisonneuve

Veolia

Poster Display Only

P70

Raju

Mangalam

Sydney Water

Poster Pitch Presentation

P33/106

John

Mann

Fraser Coast Regional Council

Technical/Case Study Presentation

128

Gretchen

Marshall

SA Water

Technical/Case Study Presentation

193

Rebecca

Marshall

Unitywater

Technical/Case Study Presentation

284

Robert

Martinovic

Downer

Poster Pitch Presentation

P59/313

Greg

Mashiah

Clarence Valley Council

Poster Pitch Presentation

P31/281

Tony

McClymont

Hunter Water Corporation

Technical/Case Study Presentation

245

Professor Jennifer

Mckay

University of South Australia

Accent Speaker

Jon

McNish

PwC

Poster Pitch Presentation

299

Dr Cameron

McPhail

Isle Utilities

Poster Pitch Presentation

P4/274

Chris

McRae

Utilita Water Solutions

Technical/Case Study Presentation

P21/275 & 133

Dr Steven

Melvin

Griffith University

Technical/Case Study Presentation

157

Karen

Miller

Wood

Poster Pitch Presentation

P43/311

Sascha

Moege

NSW Department of Planning, Industry and Environment

Technical/Case Study Presentation

409

ASM

Mohiuddin

Sydney Water

Technical/Case Study Presentation

118

Dr Abigail

Morrow

Hunter Water Corporation

Poster Pitch Presentation

P16/309

Irina

Mouilleron

SUEZ

Technical/Case Study Presentation

36

Scott

Murphy

Veolia Sidem

Poster Pitch Presentation

P53/377

Dominic

Murray-Fiume

Stantec

Poster Pitch Presentation

P61/398

Steven

Nash

Goulburn Valley water

Poster Pitch Presentation

P36/129

Alicia

Nash

Hunter Water Corporation

Technical/Case Study Presentation

393

Patrick

Naughtin

Atria Group

Technical/Case Study Presentation

155

Jeffrey

Newman

SA Water

Technical/Case Study Presentation

419

Dr Gaofeng

Ni

The University of Queensland

Poster Display Only

P71

Bao Anh

Nong

Institute for Sustainable Futures, University of Technology Sydney

Technical/Case Study Presentation

410

Kathy

Northcott

Veolia

Poster Pitch Presentation & Technical/Case Study Presentation

P47/327, 339 & 328

Rachael

Nuttall

SUEZ

Poster Pitch Presentation

P38/392

Mary

O’Keeffe

Aurecon

Technical/Case Study Presentation

216

Michelle

Oberg

Downer

Technical/Case Study Presentation

264

Dr Quinn

Ollivier

WaterNSW

Poster Pitch Presentation

P8/132

Kyle

Olsen

Yarra Valley Water

Poster Pitch Presentation

P19/200

Nadine

Oschmann

SUEZ Water Technologies and Solutions

Technical/Case Study Presentation

28

Alex

Osti

Mott MacDonald

Poster Pitch Presentation

P7/333

Karen

Owens

Melbourne Water

Technical/Case Study Presentation

9

Jerome

Pabbruwe

Wood

Poster Display Only

P67

Neil

Palmer

Osmoflo

Poster Pitch Presentation

P10/80

Elaine

Pang

Arup

Technical/Case Study Presentation

P55/372 & 220

Sarah

Patterson

ThinkPlace

Poster Pitch Presentation

P41/162

Jordin

Payne

Water Corporation

Technical/Case Study Presentation

82 & 85

Charlie

Gordon

ECT2

Technical/Case Study Presentation

109

Michelle

Penington

Aurecon

Poster Pitch Presentation

P5/18

Andrew

Peters

Sydney Water

Poster Pitch Presentation

P28/180

Matthew

Petersen

Logan Water

Technical/Case Study Presentation

196

Chris

Philpot

Smart Approved WaterMark

Poster Pitch Presentation

P20/63

Dr Christoph

Prackwieser

Sydney Water

Technical/Case Study Presentation

210

Paul

Premnath

SA Water

Technical/Case Study Presentation

241

Dr Soon Bee

Quek

TRILITY

Technical/Case Study Presentation

40

Piumie

Rajapaksha

RMIT University

Student Water Prize

SWP03

Raveena

Raju

The University of Western Australia

Student Water Prize

SWP01

Tom

Ransome

SACYR Water

Technical/Case Study Presentation

117

Kristy

Ratcliffe

Hunter Water Corporation

Technical/Case Study Presentation

320

Kat

Reid

SA Water

Technical/Case Study Presentation

101

Marc

Riera

SACYR Water

Technical/Case Study Presentation

117

Dr David

Robertson

CSIRO

Technical/Case Study Presentation

273

Alex

Robertson

Sydney Water

Technical/Case Study Presentation

125

Dr Greg

Ryan

Water Services Association of Australia

Poster Pitch Presentation

P41/162

Dr Hemadri

Saha

WSP Australia

Poster Pitch Presentation

P3/10

Oliver

Sanderson

SA Water

Poster Pitch Presentation

P54/78

Vaibhav

Sankey

WSP

Technical/Case Study Presentation

241

Michael

Seaman

SA Water

Technical/Case Study Presentation

96

Hari

Seshan

Stantec

Poster Display Only

P78

Dr Benjamin

Shannon

Monash University

Curated Panel

344

Linda

Shi

The University of Adelaide

Poster Pitch Presentation

P29/346

34

AUSTRALIAN WATER ASSOCIATION


OUR PRINCIPAL SPONSOR

Michael

Silke

WSP

Poster Pitch Presentation

P22/161

Kathryn

Silvester

Sydney Water

Poster Pitch Presentation

P6/112

Mark

Simons

NSW Department of Planning, Industry and Environment

Technical/Case Study Presentation

317

Grahame

Simpson

Veolia Krüger

Poster Pitch Presentation

P46/319

Dr Nikki

Sims-Chilton

Seqwater

Technical/Case Study Presentation

280

Chris

Skellern

The University of Sydney

Student Water Prize

SWP07

Jodi

Slater

SA Water

Poster Pitch Presentation

P64/168

Misharna

Small

Western Water

Technical/Case Study Presentation

278

Nicholas

Smith

TasWater

Technical/Case Study Presentation

136

William

Speirs

Urban Utilities

Poster Pitch Presentation

P65/90

Joel

Spry

Power and Water Corporation

Technical/Case Study Presentation

155

Cameron

Staib

Stantec

Technical/Case Study Presentation

198

John

Stanmore

Hunter Water Corporation

Technical/Case Study Presentation

415

Borjana

Stazic-Mandi

SA Water

Technical/Case Study Presentation

86

Andrew

Stevenson

Logan Water

Technical/Case Study Presentation

22

Jane

Stokeld

TRILITY

Technical/Case Study Presentation

40

Erin

Su

Urban Utilities

Technical/Case Study Presentation

360

Dr Aravind

Surapaneni

South East Water

Technical/Case Study Presentation

83

Lavanya

Susarla

Urban Utilities

Technical/Case Study Presentation

244

Catriona

Sutcliffe

Cardno

Technical/Case Study Presentation

246

Nicholas

Sutton

NSW Department of Planning, Industry and Environment

Technical/Case Study Presentation

409

Thomas

Swain

Aither Consulting

Poster Pitch Presentation

P65/90

Charles

Swain

South East Water

Technical/Case Study Presentation

271

Tashdid

Tahmid

City West Water

Poster Pitch Presentation

P34/270

Ursula

Taylor

Derwent Estuary Program

Technical/Case Study Presentation

195

Suhanti

Thirunavukarasu

Sydney Water

Technical/Case Study Presentation

139

Kate

Thomas

Communikate

Technical/Case Study Presentation

140

Mark

Thomas

Downer

Poster Pitch Presentation

P44/141

William

Thompson

GHD

Technical/Case Study Presentation

285

James

Thorne

WSP

Technical/Case Study Presentation

164

Grace

Tjandraamatdja

Melbourne Water

Technical/Case Study Presentation

220

Shalini

Trikha

City West Water

Technical/Case Study Presentation

302

Pete

Vale

Severn Trent Water

Accent Speaker

Dr Jaime

Valls Miro

University of Technology Sydney (UTS)

Poster Pitch Presentation

P1/152

Dr Martin

van Bueren

Synergies Economic Consulting

Technical/Case Study Presentation

316

Dr Ben

van den Akker

SA Water

Technical/Case Study Presentation

422

Leon

van der Linden

SA Water

Technical/Case Study Presentation

419

Oscar

van Paassen

Cardno

Technical/Case Study Presentation

181

Mark

Vaughan

Logan Water

Technical/Case Study Presentation

146

Dr Cameron

Veal

Seqwater

Technical/Case Study Presentation

51

Eliza

Venville

Monash University

Technical/Case Study Presentation

209

Dr Sonia

Vilches-Montero

University of Newcastle

Technical/Case Study Presentation

61

Dammika

Vitanage

Sydney Water

Technical/Case Study Presentation

178

Daniel

Wagenaar

Xylem Water Solutions

Technical/Case Study Presentation

74

Corey

Walker

Burnanga Indigenous Fishing Club

Poster Pitch Presentation

P36/129

Ash

Walsh

Yarra Valley Water

Technical/Case Study Presentation

154

Yue-Cong

Wang

Sydney Water

Technical/Case Study Presentation

118

Zhiyao

Wang

The University of Queensland

Student Water Prize

SWP02

Yang

Wang

University of Technology Sydney

Poster Pitch Presentation

P24/169 & P28/180

Dr Andrew

Ward

The University of Queensland/Urban Utilities

Technical/Case Study Presentation

19

Peter

Wardrop

Melbourne Water

Technical/Case Study Presentation

23

Dr Rachel

Watson

Institute for Sustainable Futures, University of Technology Sydney

Poster Pitch Presentation & Technical/Case Study Presentation

P13/406 & 405

Jason

West

SA Water

Poster Pitch Presentation

P5/18

Anna

West

SMEC

Poster Display Only

P66

Dr Harriet

Whiley

Flinders University

Accent Speaker

Margaret

Whittle

SA Water

Technical/Case Study Presentation

404

Angus

Wilkie

Aurecon

Technical/Case Study Presentation

248

Dr Gareth

Williams

FSA Data

Poster Pitch Presentation & Poster Display Only

P27/67 & P75

Sally

Williamson

Aurecon

Technical/Case Study Presentation

213

Mark

Wilton

Aurecon

Poster Pitch Presentation

P33/106

Charlene

Wong

Engeny Water Management

Technical/Case Study Presentation

51

William

Wu

Sydney Water

Technical/Case Study Presentation

125

Dr Meena

Yadav

Allwater

Technical/Case Study Presentation

193

Dr Shao

Yap

Aurecon

Technical/Case Study Presentation

268

Teng

Yik

Power and Water Corporation

Technical/Case Study Presentation

48

Moira

Zeilinga

Clear Idea

Technical/Case Study Presentation

128

OZWATER’21 Reimagining our Water Future | Kauwipira Yangadlitya Mukapapanthi |

35


Reimagining our Water Future

Thank You to Our Reviewers

Kauwipira Yangadlitya Mukapapanthi

The Australian Water Association would like to thank the following volunteers who either peer reviewed submitted abstracts or the full papers contained in the Ozwater’21 conference proceedings. Name/Organisation

Name/Organisation

Name/Organisation

Adam Medlock, TRILITY

Greg Greene, Seqwater

Nicola Burgess, Urban Utilities

Adam Prescott, Camral Solutions Pty

Greg Mashiah, Clarence Valley Council

Nicole Hughes, TRILITY

Adrian Blinman, TRILITY

Gregory Claydon, Gregory K Claydon

Nicole Reid, Orange City Council

Alan Brown, Water Corporation

Guenter Hauber-Davidson, WaterGroup

Nikki Thomson, AECOM

Alana Duncker, Stantec

Helen Edmonds, PwC

Nina Braid, Yarra Valley Water

Alex Varvaris, Arup

Helen McGettigan, WGA

Pak Lum Lee, SMEC

Allen Davoudi, Arup

Hew Merrett, Department of Health and Human Services (VIC)

Para Parameshwaran, Sydney Water

Andre Boerema, Sydney Water Andrew Bath, Water Corporation Andrew Chitty, GHD Andrew Rozycki, SMEC Anne Gibbs, Asset Management Council Anthony Domanti, WSP Anthony Moore, Unitywater Bradley Shand, Water corporation Brenton Gibbs, Downer Bronwen Butler, Urban utilities Bronwyn van der Zant, TRILITY Catherine Cleary, Sydney Water Chris Hertle, GHD Christian Leah, Cleah Consulting Dale de Kretser, GHD Daniel Brauer, AECOM Daniel Healy, Seqwater Danny Azavedo, Retired from Sydney Water Darren Cash, Sydney Water Darren Romain, Aurecon David Fillmore, Unitywater David Sheehan, Coliban Water Davin Shellshear, Management Drives Australia Deb Gale, Seqwater Don Pidsley, AECOM Dr Amir Hedjripour, Aurecon Dr Cameron Veal, Seqwater Dr Frederic Blin, AECOM Dr Rachel Watson, Institute for Sustainable Futures/UTS

Hilary Nath, Water Corporation Ian Monks, Griffith University Ivan Beirne, Unitywater Jack Foster, WSP Jaco Wagenaar, SMEC Janice Wilson, Whitsunday Water Jean-Michel Seillier, Veolia Water Jeremy Lucas, SA Water Jim Fear, Seqwater Jodie Bricout, University of Adelaide Joe Pera, WaterNSW John Everton, ALS INDUSTRIAL

Pip Ochre, GHD Pirooz Pazouki, Griffith University Rachael Nuttall, SUEZ Rajesh Shenoy, Xylem Inc Raju Dharani, Program Matters Pty Ltd Raju Mangalam, Sydney Water Reba Paul, Institute for Sustainable Futures/UTS

Rob Mann, RMEnviro Pty Ltd Robbert van Oorschot, GHD

Karla Halliday, Unitywater

Robert Plummer, Retired / Director Reconciliation Qld

Kate Bowker, Water Corporation Kathy Cinque, Melbourne Water Kathy Northcott, Veolia Australia New Zealand Kayleen White, SMEC Kendall Ferraro, Water Corporation Kerry Jones, Warren Shire Council Kok Keng Tan, Arup Lachlan Guthrie, International WaterCentre Lavanya Susarla, Urban Utilities Lisa Welsh, Seqwater Luke Thomas, E&CC Lydia Wong, Jacobs Mani Manivasakan, SMEC

Duncan Wallis, RMCG

Mark Harvey, Charters Towers Regional Council

Durgananda Chaudhary, Griffith City Council

Mark Trickey, GHD

Elaine Pang, Arup

Matthew Geddes, TRILITY

Federico Groppa, AECOM

Matthew Robertson, Taswater

Francis Pamminger, Yarra Valley Water

Melita Stevens, Melbourne Water

Francois Gouws, TRILITY

Michael Silke, WSP

Gary Higginbottom, TRILITY

Michael Smit, Kingspan Water and Energy

Gemma Keane, Aurecon

Michael Smith, Ventia Pty Ltd - Infrastructure Services (Water)

AUSTRALIAN WATER ASSOCIATION

Peter Robinson, PT3B Consulting

Kane Vorwerk, Eurofins Water Testing Australia

Mark Griscti, TRILITY

36

Peter Prevos, Coliban Water

Julian Briggs, Aurecon

Duncan Middleton, Seqwater

Greg Ryan, Water Services Association of Australia

Paul Sherman, Queensland Urban Utilities

Richard Priman, Department of Natural Resources Mines and Energy

Margaret Riley, John Holland

Grant Gabriel, WSP

Patrick Maiden, GHD

John Radcliffe, CSIRO

Dr Soon Bee Quek, TRILTIY

Geoff Hamilton, GHCE

Patrick Hayde, SA Water

Michelle Snell, Urban Utilities Mohammad Hossen, University of South Australia Nadine Oschmann, SUEZ WTS

Robert Wilson, KBR Robin Johnson, TRILITY Rod Naylor, GHD Rodney Williams, Hawkesbury City Council Ron Populin, KBR Ross Cumming, Ross Cumming Engineering Sally Williamson, Aurecon Shannon McBride, Unitywater Siobhan Maxwell, John Holland Sol Asadollahi, Townsville City Council Stephen Znautas Steve Kotz, SA Water Steve Shinners, Central Coast Council Susan Crosher, South East Water Sylvain Donnaz, SUEZ International Tenaya Timbrell, BHP Tim Anderson, GHD Tony Hourigan, TRILITY Wayne Bagg, Water Corporation Wijedasa Alankarage, Bureau of Meteorology Zlatko Tonkovic, Yabbie Pond Pty Ltd


OUR PRINCIPAL SPONSOR

Technical Posters

All technical posters will be displayed in the main Exhibition Hall at Ozwater’21. See Exhibition Floorplan for the poster location.

5-minute Pitch Presenters will also have a poster display in addition to the below list. Please refer to the latest program.

POSTER ID

POSTER TITLE

POSTER AUTHOR

P66

AGGRESIVE SOIL IMPACT ON PIPE FAILURE

Anna West, SMEC

P67

APPLICATION OF REMOTE VIBRATION MONITORING TECHNOLOGY FOR CRITICAL WASTEWATER PUMPS

Jerome Pabbruwe, Wood

P68

BENEFITS OF A SOPHISTICATED APPROACH TO CHLORINE DISINFECTION

Jamilla Hull, Melbourne Water

P69

CRUSH TESTS OF ASBESTOS CEMENT MAINS ENHANCES RISK MANAGEMENT OUTCOMES

Kiran Gokal, WSP

P70

EQUIPMENT BENCHMARKING FOR OPTIMUM PERFORMANCE OF A DRINKING WATER NETWORK

David Maisonneuve, Veolia

P71

EXPLORING THE USE OF RAPID SEQUENCING FOR MICROBIAL MONITORING IN URBAN WATER SYSTEM

Dr Gaofeng Ni, The University of Queensland

P72

FISH EXCLUSION SCREENS - PROVIDING BEST PRACTICE GUIDELINES FOR SCREEN APPLICATIONS

Peter Ebenwaldner, AWMA Water Control Solutions

P73

IMPROVING ASSET DATA QUALITY AND COMPLIANCE DURING CONSTRUCTION

Andrew Foley, Locusview

P74

INCREASING SUSTAINABILITY OF URBAN WATER NETWORKS WITH HYDRAULIC OPTIMISATION

Maxime Florin, Seureca Veolia

P75

LEVERAGING RESERVOIR DATA TO UNDERSTAND SEASONAL WATER AGE

Dr Gareth Williams, FSA Data

P76

OUR PERFORMANCE EVOLUTION - AN ENGAGING EXPERIENCE...

Nathan Hallam, Utilita Water Solutions

P77

REAL TIME MONITORING OF WATER CORROSIVITY IN THE DISTRIBUTION NETWORK

Todd Lowe, Allwater

P78

TESTING AND VALIDATING DISINFECTION STRATEGIES FOR NEW FILTER MEDIA AT A WATER TREATMENT PLANT

Hari Seshan, Stantec

P79

UNPACKING THE AUSTRALIAN GUIDELINES FOR WATER RECYCLING – A ROADMAP TO ADVANCED REUSE

Julian Briggs, Aurecon

OZWATER’21 Reimagining our Water Future | Kauwipira Yangadlitya Mukapapanthi |

37


Trade Exhibition

Reimagining our Water Future Kauwipira Yangadlitya Mukapapanthi

Tuesday 4 May 8:00am–5:00pm

Wednesday 5 May

Thursday 6 May

8:00am–5:00pm

8:30am–2:00pm

Featuring more than 150+ exhibitors from international and national companies, the trade exhibition will showcase water products, services and innovations. All session breaks and lunches will be held in the exhibition area, making it easy for interaction. Pick up a map and list of trade visitors at the exhibition entrance.

Stand

Exhibitor

Stand

Exhibitor

Stand

Exhibitor

M02

ABB Australia

B47

Field Machine Tools

F31

Prochem Pipeline Products

K07

Acoem

B48

Filtersafe Australia & New Zeland

B34

ProMinent

B21

Acrulog

M25

Finn Biogas

A01

Qenos

A10

ADS Environmental Services

A17

Flexim

E25

RedEye

G07

Aerzen Australia

L02

Flottweg Separation Technology

B16

Royce Water Technologies

B49

AlgaEnviro - Diatomix

L03

Future Water

K24

RPC Technologies

D03

ALS

B40

Gale Pacific

C05

SA Innovation Hub

B27

Amiad Water Systems

A08

GEA Australia

E01

SA Water

K10

AMS Water Metering

A06

Glacier Filtration

E23

SACYR Water Australia

F07

Aqseptence Group

C08

Global Water

F37

SAFEgroup Automation

N03

Aqua Analytics

B41

Gradiant / CRS Water

M07

Secolve

G01

Aquacorp

D12

Grenof

J07

Servelec Technologies

B12

Aquatec

F38

GTS Group & Texture Consulting

K01

Siebtechnik Tema

F03

Aquatec Maxcon

C19

H2O Rx

M05

Sintech Pumps

K26

AQUEST Research Group @ RMIT University

N06

Hach

M11

SmartTech Australia

A19.2

Aquisense Australia

K04

Hayward Flow Control

B33

SmartWater Lab

K29

Arris

E28

Hunter H2O

K19

South East Water and Iota

L24.2

Assetlife Alliance

L24.1

HWM Water

A02

Southern Commercial Divers

M04

AU-LIVIC

C24

Hydro-dis

K33

Standardmark Laboratory

D01

Australian Water Association

M26

IDEXX

C13

Steel Mains

A14

Australian Water Awards – Reimagine Hub

K28

ifm efector

A15

SWA Water Australia

M22

Australian Water Awards – Reimagine Hub

M09

Independent Sewer Consulting (ISC) Services

A19.1

SWAN Analytical

K11

AUTOMATION GROUP

B35

Innoflow Australia

M06

Symbio Laboratories

B38

AVK Australia

K32

Innovative Filtration Solutions

B18

Taggle Systems

C33

AWMA Water Control Solutions

D22

Innovyze

H01

Technical Posters

F01

AWQC - Australian Water Quality Centre

D16

Interflow

E29

TFG Group

G05

Axter Australia

C01

Iplex Pipelines Australia

B32

Thales

F34

BARRON - AUMA Actuators

E15

Itron Australasia

D02

The University of Queensland

F40

Bintech Systems

G09

Jacobs

K03

The Water and Carbon Group

G15

Bluemont Erosion

K25

John Morris Group

M10

Townsville City Council

C23

CAPS Australia

C20

Kenelec Scientific

K09

TracWater

G08

Carbon Activated Corp Aus

J05

Kingspan Water & Energy

D19

Treadwell Group

G06

Challenger Valves and Actuators

C09

KSB Australia

E02

TRILITY

B26

CleanTeQ Aromatrix

E26

Kwik-ZIP Spacers

F35

Trislot nv.

M12

Clover Pipelines

K12

Liquitek

F36

Urban Fountains & Furniture

A09

Commercial ROV Australia

E31

Maric Flow Control

F39

Vendart Diagnostics

L14

Concept

B43

Mass Products

L04

Veolia

A13

Control Components

K02

McBerns Innovative Solutions

E19

Viadux + Reece Civil

B30

Copperleaf Technologies

B28

Media Wall

B05

Viega

C17

CRUSADER HOSE

M01

Media Wall

F23

Vinidex

N04

CST Wastewater Solutions

A11

Metasphere

L01

Vogelsang

B20

Denso Australia

E30

Miss Isla's Water Bar (SA Water)

B36

Wagners Composites

B03.1

Detection Services

M24

Monkey Media

D26

WAGO Australia & New Zealand

C30

Downer

G12

Mullaly Tank Solutions

G10

Water Research Australia - Reimagine Hub

B03.3

DS Insight

M21

National Pump & Energy

G04

WaterAid

J04

DuPont Water Solutions

B03.4

NO-DES

L13

Waterco Limited

J06

Eco Detection

B50

Ontoto

C22

WaterGroup

K21

ECT2

F11

Permeate Partners

B22

Watertight Robotics and Dredge Robotics

G11

Enviro Australis

M03

Phoslock Environmental Technologies

B46

WEARS Australia

D21

Environment One Corporation

B25

PIPE AI

B45

WEG Australia

B39

Enzen Australia

D25

Pipe Couplings

E07

Xylem

E03

Eurofins Water Testing Australia

B03.2

Pipe-Insight

M19

Evo Energy Technologies

A16

Pipefreezer

38

AUSTRALIAN WATER ASSOCIATION


i

OUR PRINCIPAL SPONSOR

General Information

Abstracts

Name Badges and Tickets

Short abstract summaries can be viewed on the Ozwater’21 Online Platform (refer to page 6 for further details)

Catering/Refreshments Three clearly designated catering areas are located within the exhibition hall for arrival coffee, morning tea, lunch and afternoon tea. All conference delegates and exhibitors who have been provided with or purchased Exhibitor Catering Packages are entitled to the catering provided in these areas.

Any delegate who has previously ordered and specified a dietary special order will need to identify themselves to Adelaide Convention Centre Staff and will be advised of ingredients in the lunch items suitable to your diet.

Registration and Event Information The registration and information desks are located upon entry via the Main East Entrance, directly outside Halls F & G.

Conference Proceedings All delegates will have access to the full papers via the Ozwater’21 Online Platform.

Operating hours are as follows: Monday 3 May: 3:00pm–7:00pm Tuesday 4 May: 7:30am–5:00pm

Cloakroom

Wednesday 5 May: 7:30am–5:00pm

Complimentary cloakroom and luggage storage facilities are available at main reception in the East Building, serviced by ACC staff.

Thursday 6 May: 8:00am–1:00pm

Speakers Preparation Room

Dress Code

All Ozwater’21 presenters have access to the Speakers Preparation Room. It is highly recommended that each Presenter reports there prior to their presentation to double check their PowerPoint presentation.

Sessions: Smart casual/business attire Gala Dinner: After 5 or Evening Attire Post Conference Tours: Refer to page 39.

The Speakers Preparation Room is located in Riverbank Room 1 on the Lower Level.

Exhibition Throughout the conference delegates will have the opportunity to visit the Ozwater’21 trade exhibition. All delegate catering will be provided in this area. The Exhibition is accessible through Foyer F & Foyer M.

Free wireless internet is provided by the ACC and can be accessed throughout the venue. The service is suitable for checking emails and basic web browsing. As a courtesy to other delegates it is requested you disconnect from the WIFI network when not in use.

Monday 3 May: 1:00pm–5:00pm Tuesday 4 May: 7:30am–5:30pm Wednesday 5 May: 7:30am–5:30pm

Transport and Parking Arriving by tram Free tram travel is available within Adelaide City Centre. The closest tram stop is located right in front of the historic Adelaide Railway Station, which is just a two-minute walk from the Centre.

First Aid The ACC has first aid facilities with qualified first aid staff readily available. The First Aid Room is located adjacent to the main reception in the East building, next to the central entrance.

A photocopying service is available at main reception (nominal charges apply).

Operating hours are as follows:

Thursday 6 May: 8:00am–1:30pm

Internet – WIFI (wireless)

Printing

Parents Room The ACC has two accessible, purpose-built parent rooms with private and secure facilities for feeding, changing and other baby care needs. Contact one of the Customer Service team for directions.

Catering/Special Orders

Any medical requirements should be directed to an ACC staff member who will contact the appropriate person to assist.

It is essential that delegates, exhibitors and trade visitors always wear their Ozwater name badges and lanyards. For security purposes all delegates and participants will be required to wear the official Ozwater name badge attached to the official lanyard for admission to conference sessions, trade exhibition, social functions and delegate catering. Tickets are required for entry to the Gala Dinner. Gala Dinner tickets must be collected from the ticket collection area prior to the event.

Arriving by taxi or Uber Ask your taxi or Uber driver to drop you off on North Terrace at the Main (East) entrance. A taxi rank is located on North Terrace, right on the Centre’s doorstep. Driving There are two undercover parking spaces available at the Centre. The Riverbank car park is accessible from Morphett Street / Festival Drive. Please refer to: https://www.adelaidecc.com.au/visiting/the-centre/ for more information about transport, parking and car park rates.

Media For all media enquires please contact Bianca Petrevski – bpetrevski@awa.asn.au OZWATER’21 Reimagining our Water Future | Kauwipira Yangadlitya Mukapapanthi |

39


Reimagining our Water Future

Australian Water Awards

Kauwipira Yangadlitya Mukapapanthi

2021 National Award Finalists Winners to be announced at Ozwater’21 Gala Dinner PROUDLY SUPPORTED BY

40

AUSTRALIAN WATER ASSOCIATION


OUR PRINCIPAL SPONSOR

R&D Excellence Award

Global Challenge – Partnering to Invest, Influence and Tangibly Impact Sustainable Development Goal 6 (Clean Water and Sanitation) Arup (NSW)

Sponsored by:

Development of Wastewater Epidemiology for NSW. Collaboration on SARS-CoV-2 Monitoring in Wastewater Sydney Water, WaterRA & Water Unit – NSW Health (NSW)

Regional Water Industry Worker Pilot Program Mackay Regional Council, Whitsunday Regional Council, Townsville City Council, Cairns Regional Council & Burdekin Shire Council (QLD)

Naegleria Fowleri in Drinking Water Distribution Systems CSIRO & Water Corporation (WA)

Wara Paring Indigenous Civil Construction Project Aqua Metro Services & Melbourne Water (VIC)

Northern Australia Water Resource Assessment CSIRO and collaborators (ACT) Rapid Development and Implementation of a Wastewater Surveillance Tool for the Detection of SARS-CoV-2 (COVID-19) SA Water & WaterRA (SA) Victorian Collaboration on Sewage Surveillance for SARS-CoV-2 (ColoSSoS VIC Node) WaterRA and ColoSSoS Project Partners (VIC) Project partners include: Victoria Department of Health and Human Services, Barwon Water, Central Highlands Water, City West Water, Coliban Water, East Gippsland Water, Gippsland Water, Goulburn Valley Water, Grampians Wimmera Mallee Water, Lower Murray Water, Melbourne Water, North East Water, South East Water, South Gippsland Water, Western Water, Westernport Water, Wannon Water, Yarra Valley Water, ALS, Monash University & University of Melbourne

Infrastructure Project Innovation Award (Regional) Sponsored by:

A Water Quality Digital Revolution Partnership for Bathurst D2K Information & Bathurst Regional Council (NSW) Busselton Water Filtration Plant No. 1 Busselton Water & GHD (WA) New Wastewater Treatment Plant for Murray Bridge (Brinkley) SA Water, John Holland & KBR (SA) Ngukurr Leak Reduction Project Power and Water Corporation (NT)

Zero-Energy Sewage Treatment: Harnessing the Power of Biogas The University of Queensland, Urban Utilities, City of Gold Coast, SA Water, Water Corporation & University of Technology Sydney (QLD)

Port Stewart Water Supply Arup & Centre for Appropriate Technology (QLD) Torres Strait Islands Sustainable Water and Wastewater Management Plan Arup, Griffith University & Ganden Engineers and Project Managers (VIC)

Organisational Excellence Award Sponsored by:

Trevallyn Downstream Bypass Hydro Tasmania (TAS)

Enhancing Resource Recovery Icon Water (ACT) Fulton Hogan Utilities’ Problem Based Learning STEM Program for Primary Schools Fulton Hogan Utilities (SA)

OZWATER’21 Reimagining our Water Future | Kauwipira Yangadlitya Mukapapanthi |

41


Reimagining our Water Future

Australian Water Awards

Kauwipira Yangadlitya Mukapapanthi

Infrastructure Project Innovation Award (Metro)

Customer Experience Award Sponsored by:

Sponsored by: Becoming Visible: Re-Establishing Our Connection Between Our People and Our Community Icon Water (ACT)

Beenyup Advanced Water Recycling Plant Stage 2 SUEZ & Water Corporation (WA) Bolivar Wastewater Treatment Plant Clarifier Upgrade Project SA Water & Aurecon (SA)

Customer Experience Program Barwon Water (VIC) Fig. 03 Baseline

The maps are used to Identify service gaps and innovation opportunities for improving customer experience.

Develop & Deliver

Journey maps are developed by leveraging the experience and knowledge of subject matter experts and informed by our “Voice of Customer” data.

Customer Journey Mapping Program Defining and delivering continuous CX improvement

Cedar Grove Environmental Centre Logan City Council, Downer, WSP & Cardno (QLD) Deriving Value Through Remote Access to Asset Information CH2M Beca & Western Water (VIC) Geospatial Planning Tool Sydney Water, Arup, Aurecon & GHD (NSW)

Monitor, Measure & Manage

The journey maps allow the business to monitor, measure customer satisfaction with their interactions, as well as the success and ROI of any improvements to the customer experience.

Inform Improvements

By base-lining the experience desired by our customers against what they actually receive, the maps are used as a tool to inform and prioritise business planning.

Customer Journey Mapping Program Yarra Valley Water (VIC) MID2030 Modernisation Program Southern Rural Water (VIC) Water Wizards Sydney Water (NSW) Website and My Account Water Corporation (WA)

Water Industry Safety Excellence Award

Australian Stockholm Junior Water Prize

Sponsored by:

Sponsored by:

Confined Space Entry Simulator Melbourne Water (VIC)

Bioflocculation Annabelle Strachan, Meriden School

The Claw: Eliminating the Need for Confined Space Entry Mackay Regional Council (QLD)

Filtration Using Casuarina Xylem: The Potential of Using Casuarina Species to Filter E. Coli from Water Laura Redman, Barker College

Mental Health & Wellbeing Strategy Barwon Water (VIC) Our Performance Evolution Utilita (a JV between Downer Utilities & Ventia) & Urban Utilities (QLD) Water Meter Electrical Safety Simulation Water Corporation (WA)

42

AUSTRALIAN WATER ASSOCIATION

The Effect of Ash on Brine Shrimp Deanne Kalis, Presbyterian Ladies College Sydney Water, Can the Sun Solve our Shortages? Tim Barth & Devon O’Connell – Danthonia High School


OUR PRINCIPAL SPONSOR

Student Water Prize

Andrea Georgiou Water Services Engineering Graduate, Power and Water Corporation (NT)

Sponsored by:

An Innovative Way of Treating Wastewater and Sludge Employing a Novel Ammonia-Oxidizing Bacteria Genus Candidatus Nitrosoglobus Zhiyao Wang, The University of Queensland (QLD) An Investigation into the Optimisation and Evaluation of Smart Ponds for Sludge Management Raveena Raju, The University of Western Australia (WA)

Non-Revenue Water: The Effect of Pressure Reducing Valve Settings on a Reticulated Water Supply System Andrea Georgiou, Charles Darwin University (NT)

Meena Yadav Site Engineer, Allwater (SA)

Water Professional of the Year Award

Dr Annette Davison Principal and Director, Risk Edge (NSW)

The Development of Novel Nanofunctional  Wastewater Remediation Strategies: Creating Clean Water for the Many, Not the Few Piumie Rajapaksha, RMIT University (VIC)

Chris Elliott Managing Director, Busselton Water (WA)

Use of Artificial Neural Networks and Fluid Transient Waves for Active and Passive Inspection of Water Pipelines Jessica Bohorquez Arevalo, The University of Adelaide (SA)

Professor Jennifer McKay Professor of Business Law, University of South Australia (SA)

Young Water Professional of the Year Award

Dr Joel Edwards Sustainability and Resource Recovery Coordinator, Icon Water (ACT)

Simon Roberts Senior Integrated Water Management Planner, City West Water (VIC)

Deb Brown Director, Resilient Cities and Towns, Department of Environment Land Water and Planning (VIC)

Storm Water Channels in a Water Sensitive World Kate Harriden, Australian National University (ACT)

Shannon Davies Environmental Engineer, AECOM (NSW)

Kevin Massez Project Manager, Water Corporation (WA) Adela Parnell Asset Management Systems Lead, TasWater (TAS)

Controlling Hydrogen Sulphide and Siloxanes in Biogas for Enhanced Cogeneration Efficiency Chris Skellern, The University of Sydney (NSW)

Sponsored by:

Dr Lachlan Guthrie Research Fellow, International WaterCentre (QLD)

Stephen Westgate Senior Water Quality Scientist, TasWater (TAS) Professor Zhiguo Yuan AM Director, Advanced Water Management Centre, The University of Queensland (QLD)

Best Water e-Journal Paper (In honour of Guy Parker) Winner announced at Ozwater’21 Gala Dinner

OZWATER’21 Reimagining our Water Future | Kauwipira Yangadlitya Mukapapanthi |

43


Reimagining our Water Future

Room Locations

Kauwipira Yangadlitya Mukapapanthi

VENUE MAP

44

ACTIVITY

ROOM

LEVEL

Keynote Sessions & Opening Ceremony

Halls C & D

Ground

Conference Sessions

Various

Various

Trade Exhibition

Halls F, G, H, M, N & O

Ground

Delegate Catering

Halls F, G, H, M, N & O

Ground

Registration & Information

Foyer F

Ground

Welcome Networking Evening

Foyer E

Ground

Gala Dinner

Halls C, D & E

Ground

Happy Hour

Foyer F

Ground

Closing Drinks

Foyer G

Ground

Speakers Preparation Room

Riverbank Room 1

Cloak Room

ACC’s Desk near Central Entrance

AUSTRALIAN WATER ASSOCIATION

Lower Ground


WEST

CENTRAL

EAST OUR PRINCIPAL SPONSOR FOYER A

PANORAMA TERRACE

PANORAMA BALLROOM

STAIR

PANORAMA FOYER

A

SKYWAY LIFT

P1 P2 P3

STAIR

WEST

UPPER LEVEL

ESCALATOR

STAIR & ESCALATOR

CS1 CS2

A

SKYWAY LIFT

B

STAIR LIFT

LIFT STAIR

STAIR & ESCALATOR

LIFT

Panorama Rooms for the President’s Dinner, Water Leaders Forum & Directors Program

FOYER FOYERFOYERFOYER C1 C2 C3 C4

CITY SUITE FOYER

STAIR

SKYWAY OFFICE SKYWAY FOYER

C1 C2PANORAMA C3 C4 ROOMS

CS1 CS2

S4 S5 FOYER B

SKYWAY ROOMS

PANORAMA FOYER

CITY SUITES

EAST

FOYER A STAIR

CITY ESCALATOR ROOMS CAR

ESCALATOR

S2 S3

P1 P2 P3

LIFT

S1

CENTRAL

TERRACE

CS3 CS4

STAIR

SKYWAY OFFICE

CITY SUITE FOYER PANORAMA

PANORAMA BALLROOM

STAIR

LIFT

SKYWAY FOYER

PANORAMA ROOMS

LIFT

B

STAIR

LIFT ESCALATOR CAR LIFT

UPPER LEVEL

FOYER B

S1

Skyway Rooms

S2 S3 S4 S5

CITY TERRACE

SKYWAY ROOMS

STAIR

CITY SUITES

CENTRAL

EAST

C1 C2 C3 C4

Conference Sessions in Rooms L1, L2 & L3

Registration & Information

FOYER FOYERFOYERFOYER C1 C2 C3 C4

Welcome Networking Evening

GILBERT SUITE LIFT

STAIR STAIR FOYER L1

FOYER L2

L1a PULL IN POINT

MONTEFIORE ROAD

L1b GROUND LEVEL FOYER L

F

L

PULL IN POINT

PULL IN POINT

STAIR STAIR

GILBERT SUITE MAIN (EAST) ENTRANCE

STAIR LIFT

L1a

OFFICE FOYER H H

O ESCALATOR L1b L2 L3 CAR LIFT FOYER L

ATRIUM ENTRANCE

LIFT

G

LOADING DOCK ESCALATOR STAIR ENTRY FOYER M

PULL IN POINT

WEST ENTRANCE

K

LIFT NORTH TERRACE CAR PARK

STAIR

M

LINK

OFFICE FOYER H H

NORTH TERRACE

CENTRAL

DESK CENTRAL

LOWER LEVEL

Conference Sessions in WEST PROMENADE NORTH TERRACE Riverbanks Rooms 2–8 LOADING DOCK

R7

R6

R8b R6b LOWER LEVEL

FOYER E2

FOYER E3

E2

E3

Keynote Sessions & Gala Dinner

LIFT

STAIR

C

RIVERSIDE CENTRE

D

GREEN PLAZA ROOM LOADING DOCK

PLAZA

CENTRAL OFFICE

FOYER K STAIR

OFFICE K

R8

D EAST

H

O WEST

LIFT LOADING STAIR DOCK STAIR ENTRY NORTH FOYER FOYER FOYER TERRACE R8 R7CAR PARK R6

MAIN (EAST) ENTRANCE

ESCALATOR

N

LOWER LEVEL

CENTRAL ENTRANCE

STAIR & MAIN ESCALATOR RECEPTION LIFTS FOYER ATRIUM G1 FOYER PLAZA ACCESS RAMP

LIFT

STAIR

LIFT

FOYER G

J

I

NORTH TERRACE LOADING DOCK

E1

CENTRAL LIFT FOYER FOYER DESK G2 G3 FOYER OFFICE K K STAIR

F

L

FOYER

PLAZA E1

CENTRAL OFFICE STAIR

OFFICE F

E3

LIFT

GREEN ROOM PLAZA LOADING DOCK

LIFT

H

FOYER L2

E2

C

STAIR & MAIN ESCALATOR RECEPTION FOYER ATRIUM G1 FOYER

N FOYER L3

FOYER L1

FOYER E3

LIFT

STAIR

FOYER F

FOYER E2

LIFT

G CENTRAL FOYER G

Trade Exhibition & LINK STAIR Delegate Catering

M

FOYER M

E1

FOYER FOYER G2 G3

LIFT

WEST

FOYER E1

STAIR

OFFICE F

L2 L3 CARESCALATOR

ESCALATOR

WEST ENTRANCE

ATRIUM ENTRANCE

CITY

FOYER L3 TERRACE STAIR LIFT

FESTIVAL RIVERBANK LIFT DRIVE CAR PARK

MONTEFIORE ROAD

GORUND LEVEL

FOYER F

HOTEL INTERCONTINENTAL

CITY WEST ROOMS FESTIVAL RIVERBANK DRIVE CAR PARK

R5

STAIR

CAR LIFT

WEST

LIFT

RIVERSIDE CENTRE

CENTRAL PROMENADE

EAST PROMENADE

J

I FOYER FOYERFOYER R2 R4 R3

FOYER R5

EAST

CENTRAL ENTRANCE

R4 R3 R2 RIVERBANK ROOMS

K

LIFTS STAIR

LAWN

PLAZA ACCESS RAMP

LIFT

LIFT

ESCALATOR

R1

FOYER NORTH TERRACE R1

STAIR

HOME GROUND

LIFT

RIVERBANK BOARDROOM AVM OFFICES

CENTRAL

HOTEL INTERCONTINENTAL

CS3

CS4 GROUND LEVEL

REGATTAS BAR & KITCHEN

Speaker Prep Room in Riverbank Room 1

EAST

STAIR WEST PROMENADE

CENTRAL PROMENADE

EAST PROMENADE

OZWATER’21 Reimagining our Water Future | Kauwipira Yangadlitya Mukapapanthi | STAIR

45


MORE THAN JUST TEST RESULTS So, you have just received your latest water quality results and the tests indicate you have an issue. What’s next? How you interpret the results and take action is critical. The experts at the Australian Water Quality Centre can provide so much more than test results. Our world-renowned analytical, research and advisory services will find solutions to the issues you are encountering in areas such as: algal management, microbiological contamination, environmental impact assessment, source water quality management, disinfection and water treatment systems, and water treatment plant process optimisation.

Visit us at stand F01 at Ozwater’21

Solving your water quality issues Call us on 1300 653 366

awqc.com.au


Notes


ABN: 78 096 035 773 PO BOX 222 St Leonards NSW 1590, Australia Ph: +61 2 9436 0055 E: ozwater@awa.asn.au W: ozwater.org S: @ozwater #ozwater21

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