Upcoming Events

 

June 18th OWN Picnic

 

Wednesday, 10 June 2026, 5.30pm to 6.30pm

Format: In Person | Audience: Public
Powering intelligence – AI and the drive for sustainability
From optimising energy systems and transforming research methods to enabling smarter infrastructure and more informed decision-making, AI is opening new parthways towards environmental progress. At the same time, the rapid expansion of data centres and digital infrastructure brings growing energy consumption, water use for cooling, and increased demand for critical materials. The panel will examine how these pressures can be reduced through a range of approaches, such as advances in hardware efficiency, smarter system design, renewable energy integration and more transparent reporting.

Organizers: Kellogg College and the AI Competency Centre, University of Oxford
Speaker: Dr Felippa Amanta (DPhil student in the Environmental Change Institute), Dr Kevin Grecksch (Kellogg Fellow; Associate Professor of Water and Environmental Governance, School of Geography and the Environment), Dr Yee Van Fan (Senior Researcher in Digitalisation, Circular Economy and Net Zero Energy programme). Chaired by Professor Anne Trefethen FREng, Professor of Scientific Computing, University of Oxford.
Venue: Kellogg College - The Hub
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Tuesday 09 June, 16.30-17.30 (refreshments from 16.00)

Title: Bringing Rivers Back to Life: Indigenous Water Management in Mexico
Speaker: Dr Adriana Flores-Díaz
Organiser: Laudato Si' Research Institute, Campion Hall
Register: http://lsri.campion.ox.ac.uk/events/rivers
 

Water is an element with multiple social and cultural meanings. But stress on rivers due to changing climate, increasing pollution and poor management is a major global issue. And not least in the UK where the Rivers Trust estimates that only 15% of English rivers are in good health.

Traditional ecological knowledge can offer wisdom and practical insights. Indigenous and local communities approach rivers not just as resources, but as living systems with cultural, spiritual, and ecological significance. This can be transferred into practical outcomes that are relevant to us all - including aquatic species conservation, community governance techniques and supporting a change in public attitudes.

Based on original fieldwork carried out in the territory of the Ayuuk (Mixe) people in the province of Oaxaca, southern Mexico, this lecture will explore the biophysical, spiritual, symbolic, epistemic and governance factors associated with initiatives to recover rivers as living ecosystems. It will highlight the importance of local knowledge and worldviews in understanding rivers not merely as “water pipes”, but as ecosystems that need to be brought back to life.

This will be an in-person only event, held at Campion Hall (located just off St Aldate’s next to Pembroke College).