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Resilience at Scale: A New Paradigm for Infrastructure Investments

Resilience at Scale: A New Paradigm for Infrastructure Investments

Resilience at Scale: A New Paradigm for Infrastructure Investments
jschoshinski
Wed, 10/02/2024 – 18:59

Please join the CSIS Sustainable Development and Resilience Initiative to examine the importance of U.S. government climate-resilient infrastructure investments in developing countries around the world, and best practices for applying a systems approach to infrastructure planning and design in the face of extreme weather. The event will also serve to launch “Resilience at Scale: A Systems Approach to Climate-Resilient Infrastructure Planning,” a report developed through an interagency process led by the U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID) and the Millennium Challenge Corporation (MCC) in support of the President’s Emergency Plan for Adaptation and Resilience. 
Infrastructure projects are often focused on specific roads, buildings, dams, ports, and other critical facilities, but such individual assets are each a part of broader networks that can face climate-change related disruptions and cascading failures. A hospital becomes inaccessible, regardless of whether it is designed to be resilient, if the access roads and bridges that lead to it are damaged by a storm. Even though U.S. agencies have been systematically screening their international development investments for climate risks in accordance with an executive order since 2014, government investments and partnerships in climate-vulnerable countries need to go further by transitioning to a systems approach to climate resilience planning. 
This event is an opportunity to better understand some of the institutional, technical, and financial barriers to such a systems approach, and how U.S. government agencies, working to implement PREPARE, aim to overcome them. It will also serve as another window into the latest thinking about the emerging resilience economy around the world and how it relates to U.S. security and economic interests.  
A light networking reception will immediately follow the event. 

Event Date
Thursday, October 10, 2024, 10:00
– 11:30 am EDT
(2:00 – 3:30 pm UTC)

Advanced registration required
Off

External Link
Register Here

Event Format

Virtual
In-Person

Event Type
Webinar/Presentation

Topic

Adaptation
Infrastructure
Resilience

Strategic Objective

Adaptation

Sectors

Adaptation
Infrastructure

Region

Global

Add to calendar
Add to Calendar
2024-10-10 14:00:00
2024-10-10 15:30:00
Resilience at Scale: A New Paradigm for Infrastructure Investments

Please join the CSIS Sustainable Development and Resilience Initiative to examine the importance of U.S. government climate-resilient infrastructure investments in developing countries around the world, and best practices for applying a systems approach to infrastructure planning and design in the face of extreme weather. The event will also serve to launch “Resilience at Scale: A Systems Approach to Climate-Resilient Infrastructure Planning,” a report developed through an interagency process led by the U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID) and the Millennium Challenge Corporation (MCC) in support of the President’s Emergency Plan for Adaptation and Resilience. 
Infrastructure projects are often focused on specific roads, buildings, dams, ports, and other critical facilities, but such individual assets are each a part of broader networks that can face climate-change related disruptions and cascading failures. A hospital becomes inaccessible, regardless of whether it is designed to be resilient, if the access roads and bridges that lead to it are damaged by a storm. Even though U.S. agencies have been systematically screening their international development investments for climate risks in accordance with an executive order since 2014, government investments and partnerships in climate-vulnerable countries need to go further by transitioning to a systems approach to climate resilience planning. 
This event is an opportunity to better understand some of the institutional, technical, and financial barriers to such a systems approach, and how U.S. government agencies, working to implement PREPARE, aim to overcome them. It will also serve as another window into the latest thinking about the emerging resilience economy around the world and how it relates to U.S. security and economic interests.  
A light networking reception will immediately follow the event. 

Global Climate Change
team@climatelinks.org
UTC
public

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Hydrogen energy micro-credentials aim to upskill engineers

Hydrogen energy micro-credentials aim to upskill engineers

Engineers Australia, through Engineering Education Australia (EEA) and Deakin University, will launch a suite of hydrogen energy micro-credentials with the aim of upskilling the engineering workforce. This will also help to address the talent shortage in the hydrogen and engineering sectors, aligning with the nation’s clean energy goals.

Supported by funding from the Australian Government through the Local Jobs Program, the project includes four micro-credentials and one webinar:

Handling Hydrogen for Engineers
Hydrogen Fuel Cell Operation, Safety and Maintenance
Hydrogen Electrolysers
Hydrogen in the Built Environment
Hydrogen and Social Responsibility for Engineers (Webinar)
 

The training suite aims to bridge knowledge gaps across energy, transport, planning, water and government sectors, equipping them with the necessary skills to safely and effectively advance the hydrogen economy.

Head of EEA Joel Evans said: “Research shows a severe talent shortage in hydrogen engineering is impacting our path to net zero.”

“These micro-credentials can bridge that gap by equipping engineers with the skills they need. Partnering with Deakin University allows us to offer practical, industry-focused education to support the profession’s leading role in Australia’s shift to clean energy.”

The project was initiated in 2022 when researchers from Hycel (Deakin University’s hydrogen technology hub) and the School of Engineering began investigating the knowledge, skills and attributes needed for developing a safe, reliable hydrogen engineering workforce.

The project is now underway and is scheduled for completion by 30 June 2025.

Image credit: iStock.com/Scharfsinn86