In this month’s episode of The Engineers Collective podcast from New Civil Engineer we mark one year since the publication of the 2023 update to the PAS 2080 standard for carbon management in infrastructure.
We’ve gathered representatives from Mott MacDonald, the Department for Transport and Anglian Water to gain insight a series of roundtables held by Mott MacDonald where industry stakeholders discussed and debated how PAS 2080 should be implemented in their businesses and projects.
DfT head of systems Tom McLenachan tells us about the systems thinking outcomes from the roundtables, Mott MacDonald water and infrastructure technical principal Heather Marshall discusses the procurement outcomes from the debate and Anglian Water @one Alliance carbon sustainability manager Alex Herridge provides insight on the decision making outcomes from the discussions.
Prior to the interview portion, NCE editor Gavin Pearson, news editor Rob Hakimian and reporter Tom Johnson discuss some of the month’s biggest stories, touching on the lack of infrastructure in the recent Budget and Anglian Water’s development of its £2.2bn Fenlands Reservoir. Lastly, Tom tells us about his recent visit to the Woodsmith polyhalite mine in Yorkshire.
The Engineers Collective is available via Apple Podcasts, Spotify, A-cast, Stitcher, PodBean and via newcivilengineer.com/podcast
Francis Scott Key collapse and Everton's new stadium - Plus ICE President Anusha Shah on biodiversity and nature based solutions
In the news: climate, rail reform, and space weather? Plus, building theworkforce of the future at the Constructionarium with Julia Stevens
How hydrogen could ‘electroshock’ the energy transition, with Arthur D Little
What does ‘transforming infrastructure performance’ mean?
The value of place making in construction and engineering
The importance of collaborative reporting to ensure structural and fire safety
How cloud based data management is improving delivery of major infrastructure projects
How smart data could improve flood management to create climate resilient infrastructure
Making a visible difference to tackling mental health and suicide risk in construction
Technology has changed the face of construction over the last 40 years but further change is needed
Success of megaprojects is down to a handful of key factors
Artificial Intelligence will supercharge engineers rather than replace them
How dialogue and collaboration delivered the Bank Station Capacity Upgrade on budget
How technology uptake is the key to delivering work faster with fewer people
Lessons to be learned 10 years on from completion of the Shard
2022 recap featuring HS2 costs, Norway bridge collapse and imperial measurements backlash
Why civil engineers and financiers need to build better relationships to deliver on net zero
Barriers to adopting digital technology in construction
Designing to create space rather than a building is key to regeneration
Create your
podcast in
minutes
It is Free
gm! crypto
CyberWire Daily
The WAN Show
Cyber Security Headlines
Babbage from The Economist