Water Network March Update_HQP

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McMaster Water Updates
Dear Reader,

Welcome to the March edition of this monthly e-newsletter.

The aim of this newsletter is to build a community of water researchers and enthusiasts at McMaster by sharing all things water.

Please let us know if you would like to
include something in the next newsletter or share your thoughts on what you would like to see added to the newsletters, here. Kindly share this newsletter with your students and encourage them to sign up, as there are many Postdoc, PhD and MSc positions advertised every month. 

Highlights in this edition include:
  • World Water Day lunch and workshop at McMaster
  • Global Water Futures - Register for annual science meeting, May 2019
  • Funding opportunities for researchers
  • Graduate opportunities
Register

Water News

A short round up of some water news at McMaster and around the world. 

Whats coming out of McMaster: Being a dad is hard when you’re a plainfin midshipman fish. Addressing water security at home and around the world. 

A global run down: Why water is one of the weirdest things in the universe. The drinking water industry says aging infrastructure is its top challenge. Antibiotic resistance is spreading from wastewater treatment plants. Can AI help? Pharmaceutical concentrations in freshwater are increasing worldwide. Lake Erie deserves to have its own bill of rights. Dramatic rainfall changes for key crops predicted even with reduced greenhouse gas emissions.  A faster, more accurate way to monitor drought

Events

  • Canadian Water Network Blue Cities 2019
  • Ontario’s Water Conference and Trade Show 2019
  • GWF 2nd Annual Open Science Meeting
  • 9th International Young Water Professionals Conference
  • Workshop for Early Career Hydrologists presented by the Canadian Young Hydrologic Society (CYHS)
  • 18th International Conference on Cold Regions Engineering
    • 8th Canadian Permafrost Conference
    • Aug 18-22, 2019 • Quebec City 
    • Find out more
    •  
  • SIWI World Water Week - Water for society: Including all
  • Water Future Conference 2019
    • Sept 24-27, 2019 • Bengaluru, India 
    • GWF is helping co-organize and will lead the Climate Change and Water theme. Abstract submission deadline is February 28, 2019
    • Find out more
McMaster's projects include:
1. Boreal Water Futures
2. Co-Creation of Indigenous Water Quality Tools
3. Mountain Water Futures
4. Sensors and Sensing Systems for Water Quality Monitoring
5. Southern Forests Water Futures
6. Ohneganos– Indigenous ecological knowledge, training and co-creation of mixed method tools
The second Global Water Futures (GWF) Annual Science Meeting is open to all members and affiliates of the GWF Program and its extended community of partners, as well as all who wish to be involved with GWF. This meeting will bring together the entire program for the second time, and will include a number of exciting, informative, and unique events and activities meant to review and better link together GWF’s technical and scientific advancements, whilst promoting further development and training of early career researchers, Indigenization of GWF, and engaging with partners and stakeholders.
Register before March 20
The latest GWF newsletter for January 2019 is now available here
GWF invites interested researchers to submit an application for a GWF Affiliate Project. The purpose of these affiliated projects is to give opportunities to new and existing GWF researchers to either enhance existing research, or to present new research. These opportunities may contribute strategically towards the GWF vision, mission and goals. GWF seeks to provide in-kind support to these projects and to benefit from these linkages wherever possible.
 
Find out more

In January 2019, Global Water Futures announced funding for 6 Indigenous-led projects across Canada to aid Indigenous communities in water-related issues.

The 6 research projects are advancing understanding of traditional knowledge and western knowledge indicators and working together to research and aid in water governance, food security, sediment restoration, water security, climate change and human and ecosystem health in Indigenous communities.

Read more...

Submission Deadline: March 31, 2019

This is a yearly photo contest award to be conferred to an individual or a group affiliated with Global Water Futures (GWF) in recognition of her/his/team’s commitment to the promotion of Global Water Futures research.

Submit a photo(s) along with the caption and brief description of the activity to Mark Ferguson at m.ferguson@usask.ca

#GWFdiscover


Funding Opportunities

 
Previously announced

1. Connection Grants, Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council (SSHRC)
SSHRC has established the following deadlines for Connection Grant competitions:  February 1, May 1, August 1, and November 1. Connection Grants support events and outreach activities geared toward short-term, targeted knowledge mobilization initiatives. These events and activities represent opportunities to exchange knowledge and to engage on research issues of value to those participating. Events and outreach activities funded by a Connection Grant may often serve as a first step toward more comprehensive and longer-term projects potentially eligible for funding through other SSHRC funding opportunities.

Connection Grant proposals may involve any disciplines, thematic areas, approaches or subject areas eligible for SSHRC funding. Additional information regarding Subject Matter Eligibility can be found at http://www.sshrc-crsh.gc.ca/funding-financement/apply-demande/background-renseignements/selecting_agency-choisir_organisme_subventionnaire-eng.aspx.

Connection Grants support workshops, colloquiums, conferences, forums, summer institutes or other events or outreach activities that facilitate:
  • disciplinary and/or interdisciplinary exchanges in the humanities and social sciences;
  • scholarly exchanges between those working in the social sciences and humanities and those working in other research fields;
  • intersectoral exchanges between academic researchers in the humanities and social sciences, and researchers and practitioners from the public, private and/or not-for-profit sectors; and/or
  • international research collaboration and scholarly exchanges between researchers, students and non-academic partners from other countries.
Particular importance will be placed on applications proposing open-access and open-source approaches to knowledge mobilization.  Proposals must also include a plan for the maintenance, lifespan, dissemination and preservation of any resulting digital data.
 
Research Data Management Capacity Building Initiative
As part of the current Connection Grants competition, SSHRC is offering special Connection Grants to help the Canadian social sciences and humanities research community strengthen its capacity for data management. This Research Data Management Capacity Building Initiative offers the research community (e.g., disciplinary and professional associations; institutions; and individual researchers) Connection Grants to support the development, adoption and dissemination of research data management standards, practices, tools and skills appropriate to their field.

Applications to this initiative will be subject to the same evaluation criteria and scoring scheme common to all other Connection Grants. However, applicants must show how their project addresses the initiative’s specific goals (see the initiative’s full description).

Link: http://www.sshrc-crsh.gc.ca/funding-financement/programs-programmes/connection_grants-subventions_connexion-eng.aspx.

Value: The maximum value of a Connection Grant for an event is $25,000 over 1 year.  The minimum request required is $7,000.
 
The maximum value of a Connection Grant for other outreach activities is $50,000 over 1 year.  SSHRC is willing to consider amounts higher than $50,000, although such applications must satisfactorily justify the need for the higher amount, as well as provide evidence the entire award can be managed within the one-year timeframe.

Eligibility: Individuals may only be applicant/project director and co-applicant on one active Connection Grant (individual or institutional) at a time.  Furthermore, an applicant/project director may apply for only one Connection Grant per calendar year.

Application process: If you intend to submit an application, notify ROADS by March 13, 2019.
The initial draft of the application and letters of support are due to ROADS, by April 10, 2019.  
The final draft, and a completed and signed Application Approval Form, are due to ROADS by April 25, 2019. 
ROADS will submit the application to SSHRC by 4:30 pm on May 1. 

ROADS contact: Christina Pellegrini at pellegrc@mcmaster.ca or extension 27207
 
2. New Directions (ND) grants, American Chemical Society, Petroleum Research Fund (PRF)
The objective of the ND Grant is to 1) support fundamental research in the petroleum field, 2) develop the next generation of engineers and scientists through support of advanced scientific education, 3) support scientists and engineers (with limited or even no preliminary results for a research project), who intend to use the PRF-driven preliminary results to seek continuation funding from other agencies. The grant must be used to illustrate proof of concept/feasibility. Accordingly, the grant is viewed as seed money for new research ventures.

Link: https://www.acs.org/content/acs/en/funding-and-awards/grants/prf/programs/nd.html 

Value: maximum $110,000 over 2 years

Application process: The American Chemical Society application deadline is March 15, 2019.

ROADS contact: Miky (Mihaela) Dumitrescu, Senior Advisor, at dumitrm@mcmaster.ca or extension 21548
 
3. Human Frontier Science Program (HFSP): Research grants
The HFSP supports 1) innovative, research projects, and 2) international, extensive, scientific collaboration among teams of independent scientists working in different countries, and in different disciplines.
 
The objective of the Research Grant is to promote basic research focused on the elucidation of the sophisticated and complex mechanisms of living organisms, for the benefit of all humankind. Applicants are expected to develop novel lines of research, distinct from their ongoing research.
review 2. Scientific Scope, page 4 at http://www.hfsp.org/sites/www.hfsp.org/files/webfm/Grants/LI%20Guidelines.pdf
 
Program Grants/Young Investigators’ Grants: 
Program Grants are for independent scientists at all stages of their careers.
. Young Investigators’ Grants are for teams of scientists who are all within 5 years of establishing an independent laboratory, and within 10 years of obtaining their PhDs.
 
Both grants provide 3 years support for 2 – 4 member teams, with not more than one member from any one country. The principal applicant must be located in one of the HFSP member countries (co-investigators may be located in any country).
review Eligible countries at http://www.hfsp.org/funding/eligible-countries
 
Link: http://www.hfsp.org/ and http://www.hfsp.org/funding/research-grants/information-and-guidelines

Value:
Teams will receive a maximum $450,000 per year, for 3 years,  depending on the size of the team.
$250,000 for a team of 2
$350,000 for a team of 3
$450,000 for a team of 4 or more. review 5.2. Amount of award, page 9 at
http://www.hfsp.org/sites/www.hfsp.org/files/webfm/Grants/LI%20Guidelines.pdf
 
Application process: The HFSP initiate an application/reference number deadline is March 18, 2019. The letter of intent deadline is March 28, 2019.
 
ROADS contact: Nathan Coschi, Senior Advisor, at coschimn@mcmaster.ca or extension 21581
 
4. 2018 Spring Flooding, ICLR and MEOPAR call for proposal
The Institute for Catastrophic Loss Reduction (ICLR) and the Marine Environmental Observation Prediction and Response (MEOPAR) Network of Centres of Excellence, invite proposals from social scientists to quickly deploy to a disaster-affected area in the aftermath of an extreme event to collect perishable data.
 
The purpose of this funding opportunity is to support research that will learn from disaster events, in order to better prevent disasters and protect communities in the future.
 
This joint funding opportunity is being made available under the ICLR Quick Response Program (QRP) and MEOPAR’s Prompt Data Collection Program (PDC).
 
Link: https://research-tools.mun.ca/funding/opportunities/iclr-and-meopar-call-for-proposals-2018-spring-flooding/ and https://www.iclr.org/wp-content/uploads/2018/04/ICLR-Quick-Response-Program.pdf

Value: Applicants are required to submit a budget that cannot exceed $5,000 for a QRP application or $10,000 for a PDC application.

Application Process: There is no fixed deadline for submitting proposals, proposals are submitted and reviewed on an ongoing basis. Notify ROADS of intent to apply as soon as possible.

ROADS Contact: Christina Pellegrini, Senior Advisor, at pellegrc@mcmaster.ca or extension 27207
 
5. International Policy Ideas Challenge 2019: Government of Canada, Global Affairs Canada and the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council (SSHRC)
The objective of the program is to draw on the network of talented Canadian graduate students, post-doctoral fellows, and early-career civil society researchers to identify concrete, innovative solutions to emerging, international policy challenges faced by Canada.
 
Each proposal should offer solutions bridging at least two of the three policy areas under Global Affairs Canada's mandate: foreign policy, trade, and international development. Ideas should be linked to the Themes indicated at https://international.gc.ca/world-monde/study_work_travel-etude_travail_voyage/proposals-2019- propositions.aspx?lang=eng
 
The program offers applicants a chance to test their skills at translating academic expertise into policy language. Applicants are invited to submit brief proposals. The authors of ten winning proposals will be given several months to consult with Global Affairs Canada client divisions, and further develop their ideas into longer policy briefs. The policy briefs will then be presented to Government of Canada officials in a day-long Ideas Symposium, hosted by Global Affairs Canada in Ottawa in late fall 2019.

Value: Ten winning projects will receive $3,000 each (regardless of whether the proposal is submitted by an individual, or a team). The award will be provided upon the submission of the final brief and formal presentation at Global Affairs Canada. In addition to the award, a modest travel supplement may be provided to facilitate the in-person participation of the lead researcher in the Ideas Symposium.

Eligibility: Individuals may only be applicant/project director and co-applicant on one active Connection Grant (individual or institutional) at a time.  Furthermore, an applicant/project director may apply for only one Connection Grant per calendar year.

Application process: 
A transcript of questions and answers from the informational teleconference will be posted on this website following the session, https://international.gc.ca/world-monde/study_work_travel-etude_travail_voyage/proposals-2019- propositions.aspx?lang=eng .
 
The entry deadline is March 29, 2019.
https://international.gc.ca/world-monde/study_work_travel-etude_travail_voyage/proposals-2019- propositions.aspx?lang=eng
 
6. Request for Proposals: Reducing Marine Plastic Pollution, National Geographic Society
ICLR’s Quick Response Program was designed to allow social, behavourial and economic scientists to quickly deploy to a disaster-affected area in the aftermath of a flood, extreme weather event or earthquake to collect perishable data. The program promotes innovation in disaster research by favoring students, new researchers, and novel areas of study. The program is open to all social scientists at all times, but calls for proposals may be issued by ICLR in the aftermath of significant loss events.

Link: https://www.nationalgeographic.org/grants/grant-opportunities/reducing-marine-plastic-pollution/

Value: Once a proposal is approved, a grant of up to $2,500 will be allocated to support the researchers’ pre-approved research expenses within Canada and the United States. A maximum of $5,000 is available for an exceptional proposal.

Application Process: There is no fixed deadline for submitting proposals, proposals are submitted and reviewed on an ongoing basis. Notify ROADS of Intent to Apply ASAP.

ROADS contact: Christina Pellegrini, Senior Advisor, at pellegrc@mcmaster.ca or extension 27207.

 
7. Reimagining Great Lakes Water Systems - A Call for People, Ideas and Projects, Great Lakes Protection Fund
The Great Lakes Protection Fund welcomes ideas for projects that will create and advance the next generation of actions to protect and restore the ecological health of the Great Lakes.Below are themes we are currently exploring, but they should not necessarily limit what you should consider proposing: 

1. Prototype Solutions for Big Challenges 
Ideas to address what we feel are the important challenges facing the Lakes: 
- increasingly large rain events, 
- under-investment in water infrastructure, 
- nutrient pollution and harmful algae blooms, 
- threats posed by potential and existing invasive species, and 
- adapting to the demographic and economic changes in our region. 

2. Your Idea 
The Fund always welcomes ideas for action-oriented projects that will drive positive ecological change in the Great Lakes. 

3. Talent Bank Surgey 
If you are interested in participating in a project, being an expert reviewer, or offering advice to the Fund, please fill out the survey on our website. 

Link: http://glpf.org/get-funding/projects-wanted/

Value: The average level of Fund support is $460,000, but past awards have ranged from $20,000 to $1.6 million.

Application Process: Preliminary porposals due: 31 January, 30 April, 31 July, 31 October - Final funding decisions are made by the full board. If successful, you can receive an award within six to eight months after submitting a preproposal.
Eg. If you submit a preproposal by end of October, you will receive a response (invite or decline) in November, and if invited, you will receive a final funding decision in March.

 
8. Quick Response Program, Institute for Catastrophic Loss Reduction (ICLR) 
The objective is to allow social, behavioural and economic scientists to quickly deploy to a disaster-affected area in the aftermath of a flood, extreme weather event, or earthquake to collect perishable data. The program promotes innovation in disaster research by favoring students, new researchers, and novel areas of study.
 
Although all proposals will be considered, the ICLR has identified areas where it would like to see the literature developed. This list may be updated from time to time. Proposals that engage one or more of the following topics, or classes of disasters will be given extra weight:
 1. Adaptation/Mitigation behaviours
2.Hazard risk communication - pre/post disaster
3. Community recovery/household recovery capacity
4. Resilience indicators
5. Damage assessments (social/environmental/economic)
6. Interagency and intergovernmental coordination
7. Perceptions of natural hazards
8. Post disaster mitigation – build back better 

In addition to expanding academic knowledge, funded researchers submit brief reports that make preliminary analyses of recent events available to ICLR’s multidisciplinary network of researchers, practitioners and educators, as well as other interested parties.

Link: https://www.iclr.org/quickresponse.html

Value: $2,500 supports research expenses within Canada and the United States
The research expenses may include travel to the disaster-affected area(s), accommodation, research assistants, etc. A maximum $5,000 is available for an exceptional proposal.

Application Process: The ICLR will accept applications at all times.

ROADS contact: Leanna Fong, Senior Advisor, at fongl@mcmaster.ca or extension 21583
 
9. Invitation for Feedback: Prioritizing Future Challenges for Canada, CIHR, NSERC, SSHRC and the Canada Foundation for Innovation
Canada’s three research granting agencies, the Canadian Institutes of Health Research, the Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada, the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada, and the Canada Foundation for Innovation, are seeking your expertise to help prioritize which future challenges identified through a recent horizon scan are considered most important for Canada.
 
The scan has identified 16 future challenges with the potential to shape society in profound ways, which are all multi-disciplinary and require broad collaboration to address.

The granting agencies ask that you select one top challenge, and explore its possible impacts through a brief survey. For the challenge you select, you will be asked a series of questions. You will have the option of repeating the exercise for a challenge you deem of next-most importance. Beyond the 16 challenges identified in the horizon scan, you have the opportunity to identify additional challenges deemed critical to Canada’s future.
 
The granting agencies are inviting input from a variety of individuals across the academic, private, public and not-for-profit sectors, in Canada and internationally. By taking part in their brief prioritization exercise, using the Futurescaper crowdsourcing tool, you will help to identify which challenges to consider for possible future programming and/or corporate activities. Once you have reviewed the 16 future challenges, the exercise will take you approximately 10 - 15 minutes to complete.
 
To begin, please follow this link: FUTURE CHALLENGES PRIORITIZATION
 
Results of this foresight exercise will be available by Spring 2019. Responses are anonymous and results will be aggregated to ensure anonymity.
Scholarships/Internships/Traineeships

 

MSc/PhD studentships
1. Numerous MSc and PhD positions available with the various GWF projects. Visit the website to see the whole list and for details.  
 
2. PhD and project positions (Hydrological and Climate Variability Research Group) – Czech University of Life Sciences Prague (Prague): 15 March

3. PhD Candidate Global biodiversity variables for monitoring Ecosystem Structure and Function – University of Twente (Netherlands): 15 March

4. *NEW* Doctoral Candidate position: Sustainable Urban Runoff Management – Aalto University (Finland): 17 March
 
5. *NEW* Drought risk and its management in a changing climate – University of East Anglia (United Kingdom): 22 March
 
6. *NEW* PhD Position – UNU Institute for Environment and Human Security (UNU-EHS)(Germany): 24 March

7. *NEW* PhD Student (Computational Water Research and Uncertainty Quantification Lab) – University of Hawaii-Manoa (Honolulu, HI, USA): 25 March

8. *NEW* Central Asian nationals: Joint MSc Programme Rotary Scholarships (Water Cooperation and Diplomacy) – IHE Delft/Oregon State University/University for Peace: 31 March

9. Doctoral Training in Water and Waste Infrastructure Systems Engineered for Resilience (50 PhDs) – University of Leeds (United Kingdom): 15 April

10. PhD-student: Climate adaptation and spatial modelling of future pathways – Open Universiteit (Netherlands): Until filled
 
11. Master's Opportunity in Assessment of Sediment Quality in the Saskatchewan River Delta – University of Saskatchewan (Saskatoon, SK, Canada): Until filled
 
12. Two Master’s Student Opportunities: Is Our Water Good to Drink? – University of Saskatchewan (Saskatoon, SK, Canada): Until filled

13. Two PhD Positions (Ecohydrology Research Group) – University of Waterloo(Waterloo, ON, Canada): Until filled
 
14. Employing artificial intelligence & machine learning to optimise flood control for 21st Century cities – University of Leeds (United Kingdom): Until filled
 
15. Annis Water Resources Institute Graduate Research Assistantships – Grand Valley State University (Muskegon, MI, USA): Until filled

16. PhD and Master’s Graduate Assistantships – University of Memphis (Memphis, TN, USA): Rolling 
 
Postdoc opportunities 
1. Multiple positions available with various GWF projects. Visit the GWF website for more details

2. Postdoctoral Fellow in International Relations, with an emphasis on Environmental Policy – Stockholm University (Stockholm): 15 March

3. *NEW* Post Doctoral Fellow – World Maritime University (Sweden): 15 March
 
4. *NEW* Postdoctoral Fellowship: Hydrodynamic/Wave Modeling of the Lake Champlain-Richelieu River Basin – Cooperative Institute of Great Lakes Research (CIGLR) (Ann Arbor, MI, USA): 15 March

5. *NEW* Post-Doctoral Researcher (PANIWATER Project) – Maynooth University(Ireland): 17 March
 
6. *NEW* Postdoctoral Fellow in Contaminant Hydrogeology/Geochemistry – University of British Columbia (Vancouver, BC, Canada): 17 March
 
7. *NEW* Postdoctoral Research Scientist 2 – University of Washington-Tacoma (Tacoma, WA, USA): 18 March
 
8. *NEW* French speakers: Post-Doc reasearcher on Water cycle of main rivers in China – Centre national de la recherche scientifique (CNRS) (France): 18 March
 
9. *NEW* 3 Postdoc Positions: Engineering for A Resilient World – University of Twente(Netherlands): 20 March

10. Sustainability and Development Postdoctoral Fellow – University of Michigan (Ann Arbor, MI, USA): 21 March

11. *NEW* Postdoc Position Many-Objective optimization in Integrated Water Resources Management – Delft University of Technology (TU Delft) (Netherlands): 23 March
 
12. *NEW* Post-doctoral position (Human and social dimension of ecosystem services, water and land use conflicts as well as stakeholder involvement) University of Koblenz-Landau (Germany): 25 March
 
13. *NEW* Postdoctoral Researcher (Landslide-glaciology-hydrology based geohazards in High Mountain Asia) – University of Dayton (Dayton, OH, USA): 25 March

14. *NEW* Updated ToR and extended deadline: Postdoctoral Fellow (Agricultural Water Management Analytics) – International Water Management Institute (IWMI)(Ethiopia): 31 March

15. *NEW* Postdoc position at the Environmental Systems Analysis group – Wageningen University & Research (Netherlands): 1 April

16. Postdoctoral Associate (New York State Water Resources Institute) – Cornell University (Ithaca, NY, USA): 30 April
 
17. Postdoc Position in Subsurface Hydrology or Socio-hydrology (Faculty of Forestry Sciences and Nature Conservation (FCFCN)) – University of Chile (Chile): 30 April
 
18. *NEW* Postdoctoral Research Scientist – Columbia University (New York): Until filled
 
19. *NEW* Postdoctoral Scholar – Portland State University (Portland, OR, USA): Until filled

20. Postdoctoral Fellow (Geospatial Modeling) – University of Idaho (Moscow, ID, USA): Until filled

21. Postdoctoral Fellow (OWS Groundwater Modeler) – University of Oklahoma(Norman, OK, USA): Until filled
 
22. Postdoctoral Research Associate in Hydrologic Modeling – University of California-Riverside (Riverside, CA, USA): Until filled
 
23. Post Doctoral Researcher (Water) – Lamar University (Beaumont, TX, USA): Until filled
 
24. Post-Doctoral Fellow I: Ensemble Operational Hydrological Forecasting – National Center for Atmospheric Research (NCAR) (Boulder, CO, USA): Until filled
 
25. Postdoctoral Climate Science Fellow – Environmental Defense Fund (EDF) (Various, USA): Until filled

26. Postdoctoral Researcher in Water Resources and Hydroeconomic Modeling – University of California-Merced (Merced, CA, USA): Until filled
 
27. Postdoc: Earth System Analysis for Climate Risk Management – Penn State University (University Park Campus, PA, USA): Until filled

28. Postdoctoral Research Associate (Impacts and Human Responses to Climate Change) – Princeton University (Princeton, NJ, USA): Until filled
 
29. Postdoctoral Research Associate – Texas A&M University (College Station, TX, USA): Until filled
 
30. Geomechanics and Hydrogeology Postdoctoral Scholar – Berkeley Lab(Berkeley, CA, USA): Until filled 

31. Postdoctoral Scholar – East Carolina University (Greenville, NC, USA): Until filled
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