ANCOLD 2022 Conference
International Convention Centre, Sydney, Aus
2022-10-26 09:00:00
Registration
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  • HOME
  • Location
    • Venue
    • Getting There
    • Destination
    • Accommodation
  • PROGRAM
    • Program
    • Workshops
    • Post-conference Technical Tours
    • Social Program
    • Partner/Family Tours
  • Sponsorship
    • Sponsorship Opportunities
    • Our Sponsors
    • Our Exhibitors
  • FAQs
    • FAQS
    • Terms & Conditions
    • Privacy Policy
  • Delegates Only
  • Contact Us
PROGRAM

Program

The 2022 ANCOLD NZSOLD Conference reserves the right to amend or alter any advertised details relating to dates, program and speakers, if necessary, without notice, as a result of circumstances beyond their control. All attempts will be made to keep any changes to an absolute minimum.

Preliminary Program

  • WED 26 OCT
  • THUR 27 OCT
  • FRI 28 OCT
  • SAT 29 OCT

WED 26 OCT

PRE-CONFERENCE WORKSHOP
Parkside Foyer
0730 – 1800 Registration Desk Opens
With thanks to our Satchel, WiFi, Conference App, Electronic Handbook & Name Badge sponsors

Parkside 1
1000 – 1600 Exhibition Opens
With thanks to our Barista Cart & Charge Bar sponsors

C3.2
0730 – 1700 Speaker Preparation Room
Upload your slides at least 2 hours prior to your presentation.
WORKSHOP
Cockle Bay 1 & 2
With thanks to our sponsor
0830 – 1000 DSEP Guidelines

Siraj Parera, Department of Environment, Land, Water and Planning VIC
Jonathon Reid, GHD
Neil Smith, Hydro Tasmania
Paul Sureda, Murray Darling Bason Authority
Angus Paton, Murray Darling Bason Authority

Presentation of the key themes of the guideline and the matters that require resolution. The key themes cover:

• Protecting the community,
• Legal requirements, communication,
• Stakeholder involvement, training,
• Exercising and competency,
• Skills and relevant experience,
• Debriefing and lessons learned.

This will give delegates a good feel for what is covered by the guideline.

1000 – 1030 Morning refreshments – Parkside 1
1030 – 1200 DSEP Guidelines (Continued)

An interactive workshop session with the dams industry to consider the following broad topics which will help inform the resolution of outstanding matters:

• Guideline structure
• DSEP structure
• Skills, experience and competences required for DSEP drafters
• Competency requirements for people implementing DSEP’s
• DSEP exercise and review frequencies
• Flood inundation map format

1200 – 1300 Lunch – Parkside 1
MASTERCLASSES
Cockle Bay 1 & 2
With thanks to our sponsor

1300 – 1430 ANCOLD Earthquake Guidelines

Steve O’Brien, AECOM
Gary Gibson, Environmental Systems & Services
Paul Somerville, AECOM
Trevor Allen, Geoscience Australia
Moderator: Damian Nott, GHD

Navigating the ANCOLD Earthquake Guidelines and Implications of NSHA18:

• Discussion on Risk Based and Standards based approaches
• Background, recent developments and update to NSHA18
• Basis and Advantages for using a revised NSHA18 based on using moment magnitude
• Basis and Advantages for using ground motion displacement based magnitudes for determination of site ground motion recurrence.
• Outcome of recent Geoscience Australia meeting on use of NSHA18.
• Implications for Dam Assessments

1430 – 1500 Afternoon refreshments – Parkside 1
1500 – 1600 Erosion of unlined spillways – where is it all at?

Steven Pells, Pells Consulting

The masterclass presents a framework for assessment of erosion of unlined spillways. A summary of currently available methods is presented along with guidance on their use and efficacy. The masterclass is structured to clarify three questions that are commonly asked:

  1. How do I use Comparative Erosion methods, and how good are they?
  2. Can I model rock mass erosion analytically?
  3. Where is the industry at with coupled modelling of hydraulics and rock-mass erosion?

The masterclass is presented by Dr Steven Pells. Steven completed his PhD on the subject of spillway erosion in 2016 and has since been actively involved in the dams industry, with particular focus on spillway erosion issues in Australia and abroad.

WELCOME RECEPTION
Hosted by ANCOLD Young Professionals
With thanks to our sponsor
1830 – 2030 Venue: Cockle Bay Wharf, Darling Harbour

A 10-minute walk from our conference venue will have you at Cockle Bay Wharf, Darling Harbour where the evening’s hosts, the ANCOLD Young Professionals, will greet you with a warm welcome, setting the scene for a great night and conference days to come.

THUR 27 OCT

TECHNICAL PROGRAM
Parkside Foyer
0800 – 1730 Registration Desk Opens
With thanks to our Satchel, WiFi, Conference App, Electronic Handbook & Name Badge sponsors

Parkside 1
0800 – 1530 Exhibition Opens
With thanks to our Premium Lounge, Barista Cart, Coffee Cart, Refreshment Breaks & Charge Bar sponsors

C3.2
0730 – 1700 Speakers Preparation Room
Upload your slides at least 2 hours prior to your presentation
PLENARY
Cockle Bay 1 & 2
0900 – 0915 Welcome to Country
0915 – 0935 Official Opening

Welcome
Conference Convenor: Sam Banzi

Chairman’s Address
Michel Raymond

0935 – 1015 Opening Keynote

Introduced by: ANCOLD Chairman, Michel Raymond

An International Perspective of Change for Safe and Sustainable Dams

Michael Rogers
Honorary President, International Commission on Large Dams (ICOLD/CIGB)

Honorary ICOLD President Michael F Rogers (Stantec Global Practice Leader for Dams) offers an international perspective of change – ongoing and future – for the safe and sustainable development of dams and hydropower. Mr Rogers is a Civil Engineer, Vice President and Senior Project Manager at Stantec with 40 years of experience in engineering for dams and hydropower. Recently completing a seven year mandate on the Board for the International Commission on Large Dams (ICOLD), including four years as ICOLD President, he will offer his experience, observations, and expectations for the dams and hydropower industry regarding key influential factors for sustainability, including dam safety, climate change, collaboration of renewables, changing work force, and the role of professional societies.

Q&A

1015 – 1100 Morning Refreshments – Parkside 1
1100 – 1220 Risk Informed Frameworks
Session Chair: Angus Swindon
Sustainable Management 1
Session Chair: Dewi Knappstein
New Technology 1
Session Chair: Kaley Crawford-Flett
  Cockle Bay 1 Cockle Bay 2 C3.3
With thanks to our Sustaining Member

With thanks to our Sustaining Member

With thanks to our Sustaining Member

The Bureau of Reclamation approach to risk analysis and risk informed decision making – past successes, current challenges, and future direction

Dom Galic
USBR

Saving Time and Better Managing Dam Safety Risks with Automated Monitoring

Craig O’Neill
GHD

Numerical modelling of transverse cracking in embankment dams

Ke He
PSM

Application of the SFAIRP principle to a diverse portfolio of dams

Mark Pearse
HARC

Do you trust your data? – A framework for assessing asset portfolio data health, data gaps, and robustness

Lyndon Johnson
Aurecon

Strain and Crack propagation Analysis in Embankment Dam

Stephen Chia
AECOM

Implementing risk-informed decision-making and ALARP

Barton Maher
Department of Regional Development, Manufacturing and Water

Resonance Acoustic Profiling (RAP) – A helpful and complimentary tool for mapping seepage through, beneath and around dams

Mitchell Green
Willowstick Technologies

Extension Strains in Embankment Dams and the Potential for Development of Transverse Cracks

Cameron Purss
GHD

A New Comprehensive Risk Analysis Software, RMCTotalRisk

Haden Smith
Us Army Corps of Engineers

Do you Give a Dam? Insurance Considerations for Dam Portfolios

Chris Topham
GHD


Finite Element Analysis of an Embankment Dam with 60 Yrs Monitoring Data

Joshua Chan
GHD

A structured approach to prioritisation of risk control measures across a portfolio of dams

Mark Pearse
HARC

AI for Dam Safety Monitoring

Mohsen Askari
ADASA


Innovative solution allowing the use of challenging earthfill materials

Daniel Jirik
Entura

The limitations of and apparent disconnect between standards based and risk assessment acceptance criteria for concrete gravity dams

Robin Fell
University of New South Wales

Rugged, wireless, lowpower devices for keeping tabs on your dams

Philip Winter
Manawa Energy Ltd

How digital inspections and AI – Deep Learning algorithms can enhance knowledge, reduce risk and carbon emission

Eric Audigé
Sixense Oceania

1220 – 1230 Q&A Q&A Q&A
1230 – 1330 Lunch – Parkside 1
1330 – 1450 New Guidelines
Session Chair: Andrew Reynolds
Sustainable Management 2
Session Chair: Winsome Whyte
New Technology 2
Session Chair: Paul Maisano
  Cockle Bay 1 Cockle Bay 2 C3.3
With thanks to our Sustaining Member

With thanks to our Sustaining Member

With thanks to our Sustaining Member

Earthquake Guidelines and Intake towers: Small Shortcomings with Serious Implications

Francisco Lopez
SMEC

WaterNSW Analysis of Dam Safety Alert Triggers for Warragamba Dam

Damien Bryan
WaterNSW


Remote sensing technology for dam design and prototype monitoring

Laura Montano
Water Research Laboratory UNSW Sydney

Impact of new industry guidelines and new seismic hazard knowledge on seismic hazard assessments for dams in Australia and New Zealand

Paul Somerville
AECOM

Evidence-based insights for effective dam failure communication

Amisha Mehta
QUT


Giving More Weight to Severity of Damage and Loss

Elise McQuilten
GHD

Towards new industry guidelines for emergency draw down for Australian dams

Marius Jonker
Aurecon

Application of Non-Contact Hydrometric Gauging and R Programming to Flood Warning System Design – Arnold Dam Strengthening Project

Thomas Jamieson-Lucy
Riley Consultants 


Nonlinear seismic sliding stability of the Mt Bold Dam Safety Upgrade – An approach for arch dams

Sam Lalli
SMEC

A comprehensive operational risk assessment framework for dam systems

Richard Mannix
Hydrology and Risk Consulting 

Beyond 100% is meaningless and unsustainable for public communications on the flood status of dams

Michel Raymond
Independent Engineer 

Shear strength of bonded and unbonded concreterock contact for dam stability assessment – Statistical analysis of gathered in-situ and laboratory tests data

Mahdi Zoorabadi
SMEC

What we see is not always dam true: Discovery of buried features

Polly Guan
Stantec

Roles and responsibilities in the identification, management and emergency response to failure of small dams

Chris Nielsen
Queensland Government

Defensive CFRD Embankment Design using Dirty Rockfill in a High Seismicity Environment – Waimea Dam

Brian Benson
Damwatch Engineering Ltd

Structural considerations for Anchoring of energy dissipation structures

Maz Mahzari
Stantec

Dam Safety Emergency Planning: A Digital Mobile Application

Arezoo Farhadi
Aurecon

Risk and ALARP Assessment for Upper Yarra Embankment Upgrade Selection

Gavan Hunter
Hunter Geotechnical

1450 – 1500 Q&A Q&A Q&A
1500 – 1545 Afternoon Refreshments – Parkside 1
PLENARY
Cockle Bay 1 & 2

1545 – 1625 Keynote Speaker

Introduced by: NZSOLD Chairman, Dan Forster

Infrastructure Sustainability: Building towards a better future

Infrastructure is more than just the roads we drive on, the trains we ride on or the utilities that provide us essential services. Infrastructure connects us as humans, communities, and society. It is within and part of the environment, and it drives significant economic benefits. Ensuring that we are building our future successes, livelihoods and environment for the future requires an eye to sustainability. Owen will be joining us from the Infrastructure Sustainability Council, the industry peak body sustainability, to discuss the importance of incorporating quadruple bottom line (environmental, economic, social, governance) into the planning, design, construction, and operations of assets through their entire lifecycle. In a “climate of change” sustainability is one of our most significant challenges. Can we deliver what we need to for a better future?

Owen Buckley
Infrastructure Sustainability Council

After 15 years working across state and Commonwealth government, Owen joined the ISC in 2022 in the role of General Manager, Ratings and Delivery. Owen brings extensive experience in the public sector across interpretation and application of complex legislation, international stakeholder relationship building, enhancing organisational capability, and building and empowering high performing teams.
Owen has worked within complex and dynamic environments including national security threat analysis, biosecurity threat analysis, refugee and complementary protection regime, identity investigations and overseas as Australian government representative at the Australian High Commission in South Africa.
Within the ISC Owen leads the Ratings and Technical business unit, and is responsible for all activities associated with the IS Ratings scheme, including maintenance of the scheme and working with industry to ensure sustainability outcomes through the use of the IS ratings tools for major infrastructure projects across Australia and New Zealand.

Q&A

1625 – 1655 Plenary Presentation

Introduced by: ANCOLD Chairman, Michel Raymond

Lessons learned from the Queensland Floods Class Action

Kione Johnson
King & Wood Mallesons

Q&A

1655 – 1700 Close of Day 1
CONFERENCE DINNER
With thanks to our Sponsor

1830 Venue: Doltone House, Darling Harbour

A spectacular waterfront venue housed in NSW’s first 6-star green star building with views of Sydney Harbour and the city skyline. A 20-minute walk from the conference venue.

FRI 28 OCT

TECHNICAL PROGRAM
Parkside Foyer
0800 – 1830 Registration Desk Opens
With thanks to our Satchel, WiFi, Conference App, Electronic Handbook & Name Badge sponsors

Parkside 1
0800 – 1530 Exhibition Opens
With thanks to our Premium Lounge, Barista Cart, Coffee Cart, Refreshment Breaks & Charge Bar sponsors

C3.2
0730 – 1700 Speaker Preparation Room
Upload your slides at least 2 hours prior to your presentation.
PLENARY
Cockle Bay 1 & 2
0900 – 0905 Welcome to Day 2

Conference Convenor: Sam Banzi
0905 – 0945 Keynote Speaker 

Introduced by: ANCOLD Chairman, Michel Raymond

The implications of climate change for dam owners

Climate change is impacting on water availability and floods, and this is changing the way dams are operated, designed, and managed. The nature of the evidence available to inform decisions and their associated uncertainties is also changing, and this has implications for we assess risks and plan for the future.

Dr Rory Nathan
Department of Infrastructure Engineering, The University of Melbourne

Professor Rory Nathan is a hydrologist who has spent the majority of his career working in the private and public sectors. For the past eight years he has divided his time between academia, private consulting, and on expert review and advisory roles for legal inquiries and the federal government. His research at the University of Melbourne is focussed on assessing the impacts of climate change and variability on engineered and environmental systems.

Q&A

0945 – 1025 Keynote Speaker 

Introduced by: NZSOLD Chairman, Dan Forster

Public Decision-making in Risky Settings

In this talk, I will review the conventional approaches used within governments and in the economics discipline to deciding how to allocate scarce resources across competing priorities in risky settings, and the political difficulties that arise due to the discomfort of the public about these approaches. Using Covid policy-making as an extended example of policymaking in a risky scenario, I explain how policymakers created policies that carried massive risks but nonetheless were swallowed whole by most of the public in Australia, as was the case in most of the democratic West. Reflecting on this recent disaster, I will comment upon morally and empirically defensible ways to proceed in the practical allocation of scarce resources to risky alternatives (e.g., whether to spend an extra dollar on reducing risk in a given project), and considerations about optimal public-facing messaging about the project, both ex-ante and ex-post in the event that a negative outcomes does materialise.

Gigi Foster
University of New South Wales

Gigi Foster (Professor, UNSW School of Economics; BA Ethics, Politics and Economics, PhD Economics) works in diverse fields including education, social influence, time use, lab experiments, behavioural economics, and Australian policy. Named 2019 Young Economist of the Year by the Economic Society of Australia, she publishes in both specialised and cross-disciplinary outlets, and her innovative teaching was awarded a 2017 Australian Awards for University Teaching (AAUT) Citation for Outstanding Contributions to Student Learning. She has filled numerous roles of service to the profession and engages heavily on economic matters with the Australian community as one of Australia’s leading economics communicators. Her regular media appearances include co-hosting The Economists, a national economics talk-radio program and podcast series, on ABC Radio National. She is the author most recently of The Great Covid Panic (Brownstone Institute 2021, with Paul Frijters and Michael Baker) and Do Lockdowns and Border Closures Serve the “Greater Good”? (Connor Court 2022, with Sanjeev Sabhlok).

Q&A

1025 – 1100 Morning Refreshments – Parkside 1
1100 – 1205 Hydropower and Mixed Use Dams
Session Chair: Colleen Baker
Tailings Dams
Session Chair: Niki Harandi
New Technology 3
Session Chair: Brian Benson
  Cockle Bay 1
Cockle Bay 2 C3.3
With thanks to our Sustaining Member

With thanks to our Sustaining Member

With thanks to our Sustaining Member


Tube Fishways: A New Fishway in the Pipeline for Large Dams

Nicholas Ostrovsky
GHD

Designing tailings dams for closure

David Williams
The University of Queensland

New calibration method to improve extreme flood estimates

Tim Rhodes
SMEC


Determining the feasibility of a new pumped hydro project, using an existing dam and reservoir

Beth Scott & Rebecca Dew
Entura

New insights for tailings dam monitoring using ambient noise interferometry

Susanne Ouellet
University of Calgary

Understanding flood behaviour in large dam storages using 1d/2d coupled mike flood hydraulic model – a case study on Burrendong dam

Gurmeet Singh
WaterNSW

A Pacific Island Case Study for a Multi-Purpose Dam

Richard Herweynen
Entura


Risk and conformancebased tailings management: Two-sides of the same coin

Ryan Singh
HATS

Considerations on the use of forecast rainfall for dam operations

Phillip Jordan
HARC

Repurposing Existing Storages for Pumped Hydropower

Mark Locke
GHD


Tailings Management Systems – The missing link

Benjamin Cook
HATS Consulting

Recent case histories of underwater rehabilitation with geomembranes: in still water and in flowing water

Alberto Scuero
Carpi Tech 

Assessment of Long-Term Erosion Damage in Pukaki Dam Spillway Stilling Basin

David Menendez Aran
Damwatch Engineering Ltd

Unusual design change midstream to mitigate risk of static liquefaction for a tailings dam

Malcolm Barker
GHD


The impact of hydraulic model resolution on potential loss of life assessments and flood extents

Yue Shen
HARC

1205 – 1215 Q&A Q&A Q&A
1215 – 1330 Lunch – Parkside 1
1230  Young Professionals Networking Lunch – Cockle Bay Foyer
With thanks to our Sponsor

1330 – 1435 Climate Change
Session Chair: Ramon Strong
Sustainable Management 3
Session Chair: Jennifer Rickaby
Sustainable Management 4
Session Chair: Matt Shore
  Cockle Bay 1
Cockle Bay 2 C3.3
With thanks to our Sustaining Member

With thanks to our Sustaining Member

With thanks to our Sustaining Member


Solar panels on reservoirs

Leandro Flach
Klohn Crippen Berger

Understanding Consequences Through LifeSim

Woodrow Fields
US Army Corps of Engineers

Are Dam Safety Reviews really necessary to confirm the adequacy of the design, operation and maintenance of a major dam

David Ryan
Stantec

Climate Change Analysis for USACE Dam Modification Studies

Brian Francis
United States Army Corps of Engineers 


Assessing and improving uncertainty in Dam Emergency Response Planning using HEC-LifeSim

Elizabeth Saunders
GHD

Application of Risk Analysis to evaluate Freeboard for an Extreme Consequence Category Tailings Facility

Malcolm Barker
GHD

Assessment of Climate Change Impacts to a Large Dam in Vietnam

William Veale
Damwatch Engineering Ltd

The 2022 floods in SouthEast Queensland

Chris Nielsen
Queensland Government


Novel use of plastic concrete for coffer dam construction

Sasha Longo
Entura

The effect of a changing climate on dam safety – changing design flood hydrology

Ryan Gray
GHD

Is RCEM dead?

Adam Broit
Aurecon


Cleaning of Concrete Dam Foundation Relief Drains – A Case Study of Mahinerangi Dam

Ross Campbell
Riley Consultants

1435 – 1445 Q&A Q&A Q&A
1445 – 1515 Afternoon Refreshments – Parkside 1
PLENARY
Cockle Bay 1 & 2

1515 – 1615 Conference Close, Awards and Presentations

Facilitated by: ANCOLD Chairman

Young Professional Best Paper Award
With thanks to our Sponsor

Launch of ANCOLD 2023

1615 – 1730 ANCOLD AGM
END OF CONFERENCE DRINKS
Cockle Bay Foyer
With thanks to our Sponsor

SAT 29 OCT

POST-CONFERENCE TECHNICAL TOURS
0800 – 1700 Where: Warragamba Dam
Cost: $180pp (price includes coach transport and all meals/snacks)
A one-day conference tour will be held on the weekend immediately following the Technical Conference. Departing Saturday morning from the ICC at 8.00am, this tour is a full day visit to Warragamba Dam, including technical presentations on recent investigations and tours of the Visitor Centre and the Dam. Includes morning tea, lunch and afternoon tea. The coach will return to ICC Sydney via a stop at the Sydney Airport at approximately 5pm for those wishing to fly home that evening.
With thanks to our refreshment breaks sponsor

Click here for further information

LATEST NEWS

Registration is now open. There is still time to register.

The preliminary program now released.

Join us in Sydney, 26th – 28th October 2022!

ANCOLD’s MISSION

As the industry body, we support our members, disseminate knowledge, develop capability and provide guidance in achieving excellence for all aspects of dam engineering and management. We recognise that it is skills of the people involved in these activities, their sharing of knowledge and collaboration that will sustain this mission.

ABOUT US

The Australian National Committee on Large Dams Inc. (ANCOLD) is an Australian based non-government, not-for-profit and voluntary association of organisations and individual professionals with a common technical interest in dams.

CONTACT US


Leishman Associates
227 Collins St,HOBART TAS 7000
P: 03 6234 7844
F: 03 6234 5958
E: lucy@leishman-associates.com.au
W: www.leishman-associates.com.au

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