To be confirmed

Lead Research Organisation: University of Nottingham
Department Name: Faculty of Engineering

Abstract

I started off with an interest in Space and climate change from as long as I can remember. One interest looks to the future, the other at the present. In brief, this where I acquired my formal experience as a Civil Engineer;

Meng ,Civil and Environmental Engineering, UCL class of '21

Year abroad, Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute (RPI),'20

Undergraduate Research Project, Bluff Body fluid mechanics, RPI

Worked in the expert witness industry, 11 months at Kroll. Sept '21-Jul '22

During my final year of MEng at UCL, I became interested in investigating how climate change would impact food security, an interest fuelled by the stories about grocery shelves running empty because of the Covid crisis. To give some context, the UK imports 50% of its gas supplies, as opposed to 80% of its food supplies. Given the current economic crisis bought about by gas shortages due to the Ukrainian war, it is not hard to imagine the precarious situation brought about by an unreliability of supply chains due to several worsening stressors, like the pandemic, war, and climate change.

This research is perhaps what caused me to keep set my eyes on doing a PhD, when I decided to take up a job in the expert witness industry. The job involved investigating civil engineering projects in the Middle East that had faced delays in their completion and needed an independent expert to settle the dispute.

With the current comprehensiveness of the CDT programme, I hope to be able to take my interest in food security further, however I am open to being an explorer and go where the wind takes me. Stay tuned to see where I end up

Planned Impact

We have identified the potential impact of the CDT in consultation with 44 partner organisations, ensuring we are meeting the needs of potential beneficiaries. The impacts that we will develop robust pathways to achieve include:

Economic:
Our graduates will be a key pool of knowledge and skills to deliver the annual £11bn of economic benefit to the UK from 'opening-up' geospatial data. Their advanced skills in a rapidly changing technological field will help the UK geospatial industry realise the predicted global annual growth of 13.8% and transform the use of geospatial data and technology in smart cities, urban-infrastructure resilience, energy systems and structural monitoring.
Through continuous two-way engagement with our partners we will shape and deliver industry relevant PhD projects that apply students' unique training. Ongoing knowledge exchange with industry will be facilitated through regular interaction with the centre, the Industrial Advisory Board and partner participation at the Innovation Festival, CDT Assembly and Challenge Week events. We will work with the recently announced £80m Geospatial Commission to ensure the translation of new methods, techniques and technology to the broadest possible user base; using our partnerships with professional bodies to recognise the opportunities and challenges to realising the economic benefits of geospatial data.
SME and start-ups are will be major drivers of global geospatial industry growth. Innovation and entrepreneurial training will position our graduates to act as a catalyst of the growth needed in the UK to remain internationally competitive. Working with Satellite and Digital Catapults, and the £30million National Innovation Centre for Data, we will foster a 'full-circle' engagement with SME's and start-ups; to ensure our graduates understand the drivers for innovation, facilitate co-production and ensure the timely adoption of academic driven advances for economic growth.

Societal:
We have recognised the significant role geospatial data will play in providing the evidence for improved planning and response to significant global societal problems. The interdisciplinary PhD research conducted within the CDT will provide new insight and understanding in climate impacts and adaption, sustainable cities, and healthy living and aging. Our graduates will engage with key international and national organisations (e.g., Cities Resilience Programme of the World Bank, UK National Infrastructure Commission) to ensure the widest adoption of their research.

Academic:
Our graduates will form the next generation of geospatial scientists and engineers vital for interdisciplinary research at the engineering-societal-environment nexus. Their combined skills in geospatial technology and methods, along with advanced mathematical, statistical and computing skills, will provide the UK with a unique resource pool of academic leaders. The research produced by the centre, sustained and embedded by the skilled workforce it creates, will help address the Grand Challenges of the UK Industrial Strategy; AI and the Data Driven Economy, Future Mobility and an Aging Society.

To maximize academic outreach we will provide a Geospatial Systems Resource Portal that will allow researchers to access the new techniques and methods developed. Software and related methods will be open source, and tutorials and training guides will be developed as a matter of routine. We will organise CPD courses based on our unique integrated training in Geospatial Systems, open to cohorts from other CDTs within the digital economy space. We will foster cross-UKRI translation and learning by working with related CDTs; the ESRC CDT in Data Analytics and Society and NERC CDT in Data, Risks and Environmental Analytical Methods. Via our 9 international research partners our unique training approach and strong emphasis on interdisciplinary research will become internationally impactful.

Publications

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Studentship Projects

Project Reference Relationship Related To Start End Student Name
EP/S023577/1 01/04/2019 30/09/2027
2750242 Studentship EP/S023577/1 01/10/2022 30/09/2026 Yashvini Shukla