I have three main research interests:
1) Using systems thinking and modelling to explore the global water-energy-food nexus. I am interested in assessing long-term water balance projections and scenarios under an uncertain global future. I have recently extended the use of this approach to link projections directly to impacts in food and economic sectors and for assessing reservoir resilience (see publications ). I am exploring ways to expand the scope and scale of this work to include seamless global water-energy-food assessment to explore the viabiltiy of these systems under global development, and to understand the causal links between economic growth and human development.
2) Exploring the future urban water demand, attempting to model this into the future, and investigating technical and social ways for reducing this demand, particularly with a focus on alternative water supply technologies. A particular interest is investigating the extent to which cities can be 'self-reliant' on local water resources by increasing supply (especially through alternative measures), reducing demand, and becoming more water-efficient.
3) Related to the topics above, I have an interest in urban water-energy relationships to assess how cities can become more resource efficient in a time of increasing pressure on natural resources.
I am involved in the following research projects:
I teach throughout our Water Management and Governance MSc programme, and am involved in the mentoring of MSc students. I am also a guest lecturer at IHS, Erasmus University, Rotterdam, and at IMT Atlantique, Nantes, France.
Before joining IHE Delft, I was Research Fellow at the Centre for Water Systems, University of Exeter, working on two EU FP7 funded projects (WASSERMed and PREPARED). Before that I was with JBA Consulting (UK). I completed my PhD at the University of East Anglia, Norwich, and gained my BSc from Lancaster University.