Archive page of posts in this category or categories:
Sectors of expertise
The following posts are in no particular order. They are purposely randomized.
Flooding mitigation
Mitigating flood risk goes beyond response and recovery — it involves proactive strategies to reduce the likelihood and severity of impacts before disasters occur. Measures range from physical infrastructure, such as levees, dams, and green stormwater systems, to policy interventions including zoning, building codes, and managed retreat. Climate adaptation and resilience planning now make flood…
Read More COVID
Country foods — the traditional foods harvested, hunted, or fished by Indigenous and rural communities — are central to cultural identity, nutrition, and food security. They provide essential nutrients, support community resilience, and reinforce connections to land and heritage. However, these foods can also present risks due to environmental contamination, overharvesting pressures, or changing ecosystems…
Read More Lithium
Lithium has become a strategic material in the global transition to renewable energy, powering batteries for electric vehicles, consumer electronics, and grid storage systems. Demand is growing exponentially, raising both opportunities and risks. While lithium plays a central role in decarbonization, its extraction, processing, and disposal raise concerns about environmental impacts, worker safety, and geopolitical…
Read More Plant protection
Plant protection is essential for safeguarding global food security, biodiversity, and economic stability. Crops face threats from pests, diseases, weeds, and invasive species, all of which can reduce yields, disrupt supply chains, and increase reliance on pesticides. Climate change compounds these risks by shifting pest ranges and intensifying outbreaks, while global trade accelerates the spread…
Read More Aggregate exposure
Understanding aggregate exposure has become increasingly important in public health, regulatory policy, and consumer safety. Unlike assessments that focus on a single source of risk, aggregate exposure considers the combined effects of multiple routes and pathways — such as air, water, food, consumer products, and occupational environments — by which individuals may encounter a chemical…
Read More Public health
Public health is the foundation of population well-being, addressing risks that range from infectious disease outbreaks and chronic conditions to environmental hazards and social determinants of health. The COVID-19 pandemic highlighted the essential role of public health systems in managing crises, but also revealed vulnerabilities in preparedness, equity, and trust. The sector’s complexity arises from…
Read More Dangerous goods transport
The transport of dangerous goods — including chemicals, fuels, explosives, and radioactive materials — is essential to modern economies but carries inherent risks. Accidents involving spills, leaks, fires, or explosions can have devastating consequences for human health, the environment, and infrastructure, while also triggering public concern and media scrutiny. The challenge lies in balancing economic…
Read More Public transport
Public transport systems are critical to economic productivity, urban mobility, and environmental sustainability, but they also present complex safety, health, and operational risks. Accidents, infrastructure failures, overcrowding, and infectious disease transmission all pose potential threats to passenger safety and public trust. Meanwhile, climate change adds further stress, with extreme weather events disrupting services and damaging…
Read More Water source contamination
Contamination of water sources — whether from industrial discharges, agricultural runoff, mining, or natural events — poses significant risks to human health, ecosystems, and economic activity. Pollutants such as heavy metals, pathogens, nitrates, pesticides, and emerging contaminants like PFAS can persist in water systems, creating both acute and chronic health threats. Incidents of contamination often…
Read More Native species
The protection of native species is central to biodiversity, ecosystem resilience, and cultural heritage. Native plants, animals, and microorganisms provide critical ecosystem services such as pollination, water purification, and soil stability. Yet these species face mounting risks from habitat loss, climate change, pollution, and invasive species. The decline or disappearance of native species not only…
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