California Water Data Science Symposium 2019

This year’s Symposium will revolve around the theme of Open Water California- Innovating Through Integrating and Expanding the Water Data Community. This is an important thing as more water data are being collected by a more diverse group of citizens and organizations than ever.

California Water Data Summit 2019

The Fourth Annual Water Data Summit will feature leaders from California’s most innovative public agencies, companies and academic institutions who are using data to better manage water resources throughout the state.

Hydroinformatics Conference 2019

The 2019 CUAHSI Conference on Hydroinformatics will focus on how hydroinformatics can be applied to advance scientific knowledge, inform policies, and create more effective real-time responses.

Internet of Water Roundtable: Colorado River Basin

The Aspen Institute and Nicholas Institute for Environmental Policy Solutions are hosting a series of roundtables about the Internet of Water in different geographic regions and with different sectors. This roundtable focused on three ongoing projects, which are all working toward laying a foundation of open and interoperable water data, and all have significant applications for water management in the Colorado River basin: the Internet of Water (IoW), the Water Data Exchange (WaDE), and the OpenET project.

River Rally 2018

River Rally is an annual conference that provides practical education, inspires courage, and celebrates achievements related to river and water issues. The Water Data Collaborative presented on a framework for how citizen scientists can help their data reach impact by making their data more discoverable, accessible, and usable. Lauren Patterson spoke on the Internet of Water to provide broad context for these important conversations.

Connecting Texas Water Data Workshop

The Connecting Texas Water Data Workshop brought experts together to identify critical water data needs and discuss the design of a data system that facilitates access to and use of water data in Texas. Participants worked in facilitated sessions to identify, describe, and list 1) who needs, 2) what data, 3) in what form, 4) to inform what decisions about water in Texas. Martin Doyle synthesized and reflected findings from these discussions to the larger group.