FWR Events

Details

Date:
January 15, 2026
Time:
12:00 pm – 1:30 pm GMT

Organiser

IES / FWR

Venue

Online Event

FWR Panel discussion: The impact of agriculture on water

The next FWR event will bring together speakers to discuss the critical relationship between agriculture and water resources. Through a series of short, lightning presentations the expert speakers will highlight the latest insights on the impact of agriculture on water resources, experience of managing this in practice, and potential future challenges for this relationship.

Presentations include:

  • Using Catchment & Nature Based Solutions to benefit farming, water and the environment
  • The role of monitoring in support of agricultural water management

The presentations will be followed by a facilitated panel discussion, giving attendees an opportunity to pose their own questions.

This event has been organised by the FWR’s Water Resources and Quality Technical Panel.

Our speakers

Danny Coffey

Danny Coffey is the Catchment Manager at Affinity Water and he manages a team of advisors who work collaboratively with farmers and landowners across priority catchments to support regenerative farming practices and nature-based solutions. Danny has 10 years’ experience in catchment management and a strong interest in using field trials and robust data to shape catchment schemes which can drive beneficial change for the environment, water, soil health and crop productivity.

Mark Mulligan

Mark Mulligan is Professor of Physical and Environmental Geography at King’s College London and also Honorary Fellow of UN Environment – World Conservation Monitoring Centre. He works with a large team of PhD students on a variety of topics in the areas of environmental spatial policy support, ecosystem service modelling and understanding human impacts on the environment and their consequences for society. This research is at scales from local to global and with a particular emphasis on tropical forests, mountains and drylands. He is developer of a range of open datasets at geodata.policysupport.org and free web-based policy support systems at www.policysupport.org. These include hydroclimatic and land cover datasets and the WaterWorld hydrological and Co$ting Nature ecosystem services modelling tools. His research involves fieldwork around the world and he is also developer of a range of open source instruments for environmental monitoring through the FreeStation and FreeSensor projects.

More TBA!

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