Great Places, for Life - The Global Water Edition

Great Places, for Life - The Global Water Edition

We all deserve reliable access to enough clean, safe water – but with a growing population and a changing climate, the world is facing a possible 40% shortfall in water supply by 2030.?

WSP is working with clients across the globe to ensure effective, resilient, Future Ready infrastructure for water storage, treatment, supply and distribution.?Find out how we’re solving critical water challenges for a sustainable future in this edition of Great Places, for Life.


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Energy in Transition webinar - Rethinking transmission and distribution?

As the world shifts to renewable energy, building the transmission and distribution networks to power our future has never been more urgent. With fierce competition for resources, skill shortages, and complex technical demands, how can we overcome these hurdles?

Join us on 19 November 2024 for a critical discussion on accelerating progress towards a clean energy future.

Register now


Water pouring into a glass

10 key lessons from global water companies

In this global research report we explore the urgent global water crisis, the innovative strategies being employed to tackle it, and the challenges faced.

Drawing from interviews with water companies, we delve into 10 key lessons, ranging from long-term planning and stakeholder engagement to the use of cutting-edge technologies and effective governance, to tackle the global water crisis.?

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A watercolour painting of bush and a river
A bend in the Yarra River, a vital source of water and lore for all Melbourne tribes by Michael Hromek, Technical Executive - Indigenous (Architecture), Design and Knowledge (Yuin) 2022

Learning from Country for a water-resilient future

Russell Reid , Senior Aboriginal Affairs and Participation Consultant and Gamilaraay man, puts it in stark and simple terms: “If there’s no water, there’s no life."

"Indigenous values and perspectives about water have been significant for many, many thousands of years,” he says. “It’s about how to care for and restore our water resources and manage the flow of water through our streams and rivers and creeks, taking only what you need.”

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Someone holding a red umbrella

Sponge Cities - Can they help us survive more intense rainfall?

Cities face increasing rainfall-related risks into the future, both from flooding and from drought. Even if global carbon emissions drop significantly in the coming years, the science indicates more frequent and more intense rain events for the foreseeable future.

Aotearoa New Zealand is already experiencing the impacts of a changing climate, with 2023 delivering devastating rainfall events across the country. This report from WSP in New Zealand and Mahi a Rongo | The Helen Clark Foundation explores how its urban areas can adapt to the impact of these inevitable changes using the sponge cities approach.

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Three images of news items - one of a boy turning on a tap, one of two men in protective workwear and a third of a man and woman in business attire

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Pablo Vergara

Proyectista Civil Post Grado en Operaciones Mineras

4 个月

I would love to join you guys I’m a 49 yo civil engineering draftsman

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