Dr. Kim Louise Pickering

BPI Seminar by Dr. Kim Louise Pickering

September 13, 2024, 10:30 am to 11:30 am

Being Fair to Future Generations: Materials & the Circular Economy

LOCATION: KAIS #2020 on the 2nd Floor of Fred Kaiser Building located at 2332 Main Mall, Vancouver, BC V6T 1Z4

Agenda

  • 10:30 AM Introduction by Prof. Scott Renneckar
  • 10:35 AM Presentation by Prof. Kim Louise Pickering, Director of the Waikato Centre for Advanced Materials and Manufacturing, University of Waikato
  • 11:15 AM Q&A

Abstract

Materials Science and Engineering is of great importance; materials are what we use to support our daily lives and achievements. This is evidenced by human eras being named after materials (e.g iron/bronze ages), occurring as these materials have defined the capability of humans to address the challenges faced. Incredible performance has been achieved with materials including advanced composites, semiconductors, materials for medical prosthetics and superconductors which have transformed daily lives and human capability. However, currently we are on target to leave our planet much worse than it was when we as individuals came to it. Some have described the current era as the Anthropocene, relating to the impact humans have had on the planet and highlighting that all is not well for humankind and other species living on Earth. How we are using materials and how they are “flowing” through society is a huge problem; the current “take-make-use-waste” models of materials flows has to change to prevent irreversible damage. Effectively, we are stealing from future generations. This has been acknowledged in quotes including the following: “We don’t inherit the Earth from our ancestors, we borrow it from our children". We are currently leaving things very late to act sufficiently to rein in the damage being inflicted on the environment. Advances, including those in materials are now needed to enable the required transition to a more “circular” flow. This talk will focus on transdisciplinary research incorporating the concept of a “circular economy/society” and materials targeted to support well-being and a transition to a fairer world.

About the Speaker

Professor Kim Pickering has been involved in materials related research for over 30 years after receiving her first degree from Imperial College. Prior to her current role, she was an industrial researcher at Plessey. Kim is the director of the Waikato Centre for Advanced Materials and Manufacture and leads the Polymers and Composites Research Group, University of Waikato (since 2000). She was elected Fellow of Engineering New Zealand in 2008 and awarded Chartered Engineer Status in 2005. She has written more than 100 peer-reviewed journal articles and has 6 patents and more than 12,000 citations. She has received the Royal Society RJ Scott Medal. 
 
Recently Kim has participated in a 7 year NZ National Science Challenge (Science for Technological Innovation (SfTI)) as co-leader of a spearhead project on the 3D/4D printing of biomaterials and is the principal researcher and leader of the MBIE $11M funded "https://www.waikato.ac.nz/research-enterprise/research-with-waikato/amiomio-aotearoa – A circular economy for the wellbeing of New Zealand" project (https://www.waikato.ac.nz/research-enterprise/research-with-waikato/amiomio-aotearoa). She is part of the National Science Challenge  "Clean Water Technology" projects. She is very keen to engage with others in the sustainability space.
 

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