Industrial Doctorate Candidate - Bath, United Kingdom - 3ADAPT

3ADAPT
3ADAPT
Verified Company
Bath, United Kingdom

3 weeks ago

Tom O´Connor

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Tom O´Connor

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Description

Context:


Public, private and third sector organisations are under greater pressure to demonstrate how they are address the climate and ecological emergencies, and supporting the UK's levelling up agenda.

Additionally, there are a range of other crises that are often referenced such as the cost of living and housing crisis.

How land is used and developed has a significant impact on these issues as well as the potential to enable people to live happier and healthier lives.

Therefore, there is a need to better understand and quantify the natural, social, human, intellectual and manufactured, financial capital of land and its uses and the associated flow of benefits to the organisations that own it and also society that depends on it.


In the UK, there is a large amount of disparate land and building-related data that is in the public domain.

This is often geospatial and can provide an insight into an organisations impact, often in ways that the organisations themselves might not be aware of.

Accessing and intelligently combining this information could enable their decision makers to make more informed choices that delivers improved sustainability both for them as organisations and benefits to society at large.

Further, in practice, organisations are dependent on internal asset management systems that are not efficient at providing data to locate an asset, evaluate its internal and external value creation, and identify opportunities for value-add without the need to query open-source data.

Finally, it is rare to see this internal and external data being 'joined-up' with the ability to understand and quantify the potential of sustainability initiatives for organisations meaning significant opportunities are missed or just delivered too slowly to deliver the change that society requires.

This research aims to bring such public and private data together in meaningful and scalable ways.

Undertaken in an applied setting, the potential positive impact of this research could drive forward a range of targets included in the UK 25 Year Environment Plan, the UK's Net Zero Targets included in the Climate Change Act, the Levelling up White Paper as well support the delivery of the UN Sustainable Development goals at significant scale and pace.


The process of standardising and structuring the data to allow for efficient and effective analysis is a capability that is not readily available to organisations and is often outsourced to consultancies in a time consuming and expensive manner.

Moreover, the consulted strategies are often misunderstood with a lack of clear, evidence-based recommendations that often results in advice that is not progressed and delivered.

Additionally, as consultants regularly do this in an unstructured and often not entirely evidence-based way, it is difficult to compare learnings from across organisations and benchmark performance easily.


The Proposed Research Topic:


The scope of this research project is to develop a framework to bring together publicly accessible geospatial and privately datasets of organisations to enable them to make more sustainable land use decisions.

Through this process, they will be able to project, assess and improve their impacts.

Such land use decisions could involve a range of options for land which include residential or commercial development (to varying standards), nature-based solutions and/or the development of a range of renewable energy technologies and storage options.

It is anticipated that the research will involve developing a framework to inform two inter-related questions:


  • What land will best support different land-use changes / development opportunities? This will identify idealised characteristics for certain land use changes / development opportunities and working with geospatial datasets to query these to prioritise land acquisition, management or disposal.
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Once a site has been identified as suitable what are the impacts of various development standards? Once a site has been determined to be more suitable for a certain type of activity, assessing the impact of a range of relevant standards on environmental, social and economic outcomes for both the landowner and wider society. Such impacts may include, carbon emissions / sequestration, health and wellbeing implications, social inclusion, or commercial and/or wider economic impacts.


The research will also be expected to explore the inter-relationships of the above with a range of land owners to develop approaches which address real world immediate problems.

The work will inform the ongoing development of a Land Impact platform.


Sponsoring Organisation / Industrial Collaboration:


This PhD would be in collaboration with the University of Bristol and 3ADAPT, a SME sustainability consultancy founded in 2017.

We work with organisations which often have individual turnovers in excess of £1bn a year, and significant land and property portfolios.

Currently we have ongoing

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