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	Climate Compass Task Force Meetings - webinars
		20-22 February 2024 - online webinars
	  'Regionally relevant case studies showing opportunities and gaps for 
	  surveying and climate': Climate Compass Task Force Annual Meeting and 
	  Seminar Series Feb 2024
		
		
	  Join to meet, learn, inspire and share your expertise 
	  The FIG 
	  Climate Compass Task Force is holding a series of three virtual seminars 
	  across different global time zones across February 20-22, 2024 with:
	  
		  - Diverse global expert surveying/geospatial practitioners providing 
		  case studies of climate impacts and resilience
- Audience-driven brainstorming livescribed to inform the FIG 
		  Climate Compass Task Force’s latest FIG publication
- Extensive audience involvement and interactivity for learning, 
		  sharing and problem-solving discussions
The Task force on Climate compass is excited to be holding three 
		preeminent seminars, each with an inaugural task force meeting on 20-22 
		February 2024. You can attend at the one that matches your time zone 
		best. It will be one week of interactive, participatory conversations 
		bringing together surveyors with an interest in climate from around the 
		world to map the scope of where our expertise can catalyse a better 
		future for our people, planet and economies. We need your expertise and 
		experience!
		For each of these seminars, we'll be starting off with presentations 
		from each of our global expert speakers, followed by the exciting part - 
		active audience participation in both small breakout rooms as well as 
		large-scale discussion across countries, surveying themes and climatic 
		themes within the plenary room, allowing each of you to share your voice 
		on how surveyors can combat the climate crisis. 
		Our role in this task force is to bring together the everyday 
		surveyors from around the world to gather a view of the knowledge areas 
		and gaps in how we, as a profession, can remain relevant and take 
		proactive roles as specialists and generalists to be integral and 
		impactful in combatting the climate crisis. We hope that these seminars 
		provide an exciting opportunity to hear from as many diverse people 
		around the world working in surveying with an interest in climate. 
	  We need your voice on how spatial intelligence, space technologies, 
	  digital transformation and innovation come together for surveyors for 
	  climate action. It’s about using geospatial technology and innovations to 
	  protect our planet by improving data capture, maintenance, modeling, 
	  analysis, maintenance and use for climate action.
	  Join us
		Together, we will be defining and assessing what the big global land, 
	  carbon and biodiversity issues are that are relevant for surveyors working 
	  at national and local levels. This means thinking about what the legal, 
	  policy, financial, and capacity implications are for rolling out new 
	  solutions at the scale necessary. Opportunities will be identified for the 
	  development of the future of the surveying profession, including technical 
	  opportunities and how surveying education needs to be rethought.
	  Tue Feb 20, 2024 0900 GMT: Europe/Africa (0900 CET start) Asia Pacific 
	  (1900 AEDT start) -
	   https://bit.ly/FIG-CCTF-TF-Meeting-Seminar-01-EurAfrOc
	  
		  - Dr. Paul van Asperen works as Advisor, Digital 
		  Systems Environmental Act, National Water, the Netherlands. He has a 
		  Ph.D in land administration. His presentation will cover the 
		  Netherlands experience with their new environmental planning act and 
		  how the digital land administration system has been adapted to support 
		  it.
- Dr. Eranda Gunathilaka, Senior Lecturer at 
		  Faculty of Geomatics, Sabaragamuwa University, Sri Lanka. He has a 
		  Ph.D in tidal monitoring and is Chair of FIG Commission 4 on 
		  Hydrography. He will speak on Sri Lanka’s national environmental plan 
		  (NDC) and surveying challenges and opportunities.
- Ms. Rumbidzai Chivizhe has an Engineering Masters 
		  (Geomatics) and is a Lecturer at Midlands State University in 
		  Zimbabwe. She will speak on how to use a range of survey tools to 
		  monitor flooding from tropical cyclones.
Wed Feb 21, 2024 2300 GMT: Asia Pacific (0900 AEDT start) Americas 
	  (1700 EST start) -
	   https://bit.ly/FIG-CCTF-TF-Meeting-Seminar-01-APAC-Ams
	  
		  - Dr. Charisse Griffith-Charles is a Senior 
		  Lecturer at the Department of Geomatics Engineering and Land 
		  Management at the University of West Indies in the Caribbean. She will 
		  speak on informal settlement regularisation, disaster management and 
		  small island developing states (SIDS) using the extensive work she has 
		  done on this in the field.
- Ms. Kate Fairlie, with a Masters from Oxford 
		  University in Sustainable Development, works for a globally respected 
		  Australian surveying company, Land Equity International, as a land 
		  administration specialist. From their work in the region she will 
		  present 4 case studies from Asia-Pacific linking land and climate.
- Prof. Chen Ruishan from Shanghai Jiaotong 
		  University, China, will speak on landscape architecture and 
		  nature-based solutions to climate change.
Thur Feb 22, 2024 1500 GMT: Americas (0900 EST start) Europe/Africa 
	  (1500 CET start) -
	   https://bit.ly/FIG-CCTF-TF-Meeting-Seminar-01-AmsEurAfr 
	  
		  - Ms. Usue Donezar is the Expert Lead of Copernicus 
		  at the European Environment Agency. She has 2 Masters degrees 
		  (Geoinformation Science; Law and political science). She will speak on 
		  Copernicus’ climate change service, its free data sets and dashboards 
		  used by the world on climate, land, water and marine.
- Mr. Simon Mwesigye is a Land Tenure specialist at 
		  UN-Habitat supporting Ugandan country operations. He is a valuer with 
		  a Land Management Masters. He will talk on customary tenure and local 
		  forms of land certificates within the national land administration 
		  system linked to natural resource certificates for access to wetlands.
- Mr. Nelson Nieto 
			  is an environmental engineer specialising in GIS and climate 
			  change. He is a researcher in the field of Earth Observation 
			  Technologies of the Research and Prospective Directorate of the 
			  Geographic Institute Agustín Codazzi. In his professional and 
			  research career he has developed and led research projects in 
			  cooperation with international entities in the study and 
			  monitoring of natural resources, strategic ecosystems, territorial 
			  studies, and risk management. 
		  
More 
		  information about the Task Force
		  
		
		 
		Co-chairs of the task force
		Roshni Sharma and Clarissa Augustinus
		February 2024