ATEC News

Posts Tagged ‘Tropical Expertise’

A message from Queensland Chief Scientist, Professor Peter Andrews

Tuesday, January 19th, 2010 by LianneBrown

Dear Colleague
 

Last year, JCU Vice-Chancellor Professor Sandra Harding and I hosted a small, international symposium on the subject of Life in the Torrid Zone.
 

The think tank of 40 delegates considered opportunities and threats facing the tropical world, proposing a number of ways in which they might be addressed to achieve win-win outcomes for tropical Australia and our neighbours in the tropical world.
 

A report that draws together key points from the think tank’s deliberations is now available on JCU’s website.

I hope you will find the report interesting. Sandra and I look forward to working with you on the issues it identifies.

Best wishes

 

Professor Peter Andrews
Queensland Chief Scientist

ATEC Roadshow – Local news coverage

Monday, December 21st, 2009 by LianneBrown

The Australian Tropical Expertise Consortium Roadshow attracted some great media coverage when it hit the road in Cairns, Townsville and Rockhampton earlier this month.

Roadshow Facilitator Janette Clonan, and one of the six presenters, Harleigh Luscombe from Uniquest provided some great insights into the purpose and outcomes of the Roadshow.

Check out the Channel Seven Local News coverage in Townsville: ATEC Roadshow – Channel 7 Local News Townsville

Meet Janette Clonan – Tropical Expertise Business Matching contractor

Friday, September 18th, 2009 by LianneBrown

Janette Clonan of Clonan Connections has recently been appointed to undertake the Tropical Expertise Business Matching. Janette has been involved in international business development for the past 15 years. Her business experience includes the markets of Brunei, China, Indonesia, Korea, Philippines, Singapore and Thailand in Asia, Argentina, Brazil, Colombia, Chile and Peru in Latin America, the United Arab Emirates and Qatar in the Middle East and Kiribati in the Pacific. Janette speaks Bahasa Indonesia.

Among her experiences, Janette has led Trade Queensland’s Overseas Market Development team to undertake market research and analysis, across a broad range of market and services, including education, mining equipment and services, and food technology.

Recently she led Education Queensland’s International Project Unit team to tender for and win projects in the Middle East and the Pacific as well managing project delivery in Qatar and China. Janette also developed international business for TAFE Queensland International in South East Asia and South America. In these roles, Janette fostered strategic partnerships with governments and organisations in Australia, Brazil, Korea, and Indonesia.

Janette also has extensive experience in the Aid and Development area both in tendering for projects and working as team leader and trainer for various AusAID projects in the Philippines and Indonesia. These projects have ranged from organisational, exporter and small business development, to integrated water resource management. Janette will be able to utilise her international networks to foster business matching for the Tropical Expertise consortium.

Trade Queensland International Development Business & Tropical Expertise Forum

Friday, September 4th, 2009 by LianneBrown

International Development Business &

Tropical Expertise Forum

 

Time:     10:00am – 4:00pm

Date:      Monday 19 October 2009

Venue:    Novotel Cairns Oasis Resort – 122 Lake Street, Cairns

Join Trade Queensland for this once-a-year-event to hear keynote speakers from Trade Queensland’s Commissioner for India and representative for Indonesia, and the private sector on International Development Business and Tropical Expertise opportunities, as well as to network with key players in these areas.

International Development Business and Tropical Expertise are two priority export areas for Trade Queensland in 2009-10. As the majority of Australia’s international aid efforts are devoted to Asia and the Pacific, Australia’s Tropical Expertise is increasingly becoming an important contributor to development efforts in the region.

Don’t miss out – Register now!

If you are interested to attend this exciting event please register by Wednesday, 7 October 2009.

For further information:

Terry White, Trade Queensland

(07) 3225 1478 or Terry.White@trade.qld.gov.au

World leading scientist joins JCU

Wednesday, June 3rd, 2009 by LianneBrown

World-renowned ecologist and conservation biologist Dr William Laurance is joining James Cook University’s School of Marine & Tropical Biology.

He has been appointed as a Research Professor and will be based at the JCU campus in Cairns.

Before coming to JCU, Professor Laurance was a Senior Scientist with the Smithsonian Institution in the US, one of the world’s leading research organisations.

He has lived and worked in the jungles of the Amazon and central Africa, studying the impacts of habitat fragmentation, logging, roads, hunting, and fires on tropical forests and their various plant and animals.

His wife, Dr Susan Laurance, is also a tropical biologist and is joining JCU as a senior lecturer.

“We’re greatly looking forward to being part of JCU’s continued growth and success in tropical ecology and conservation,” he said.

Professor Laurance was considering a number of offers to join other universities in Australia and overseas including Princeton University in the USA, and previously Cambridge University in the UK, before choosing James Cook University.

“It was a tough call, but I was tremendously impressed by JCU’s commitment to becoming an international force in tropical forest biology,” he said.

“The University has long been a world-leader in reef and marine research, and now the push is to develop a terrestrial program that’s equally dynamic.

“I see much prospect at JCU for international research and collaboration, especially in the Asia-Pacific region, which has some of the most imperilled forests in the world,” he said.

With five books and more than 300 scientific articles to his credit, Professor Laurance is a regular author in the world’s leading scientific journals.

This is not the first time he has chosen to work in Australia.

“As a doctoral student at the University of California, Berkeley, I spent two years doing fieldwork on the Atherton Tableland, where I studied the impacts of rainforest fragmentation on possums, tree-kangaroos, and other native mammal species,” he said.

He was also a postdoctoral fellow at the CSIRO Tropical Forest Research Centre at Atherton, and director of the S.F.S. Centre for Rainforest Studies at Yungaburra, north Queensland, before joining the Smithsonian Institution in 1996.

Professor Laurance has published many articles about his work in north Queensland including the book, “Stinging Trees and Wait-a-Whiles: Confessions of a Rainforest Biologist,” which was a finalist for the 2000 Environmental Book of the Year Award.

A former president of the Association for Tropical Biology and Conservation, he was instrumental in not only turning it into the world’s largest scientific organisation devoted to tropical research, but also a major force in promoting forest conservation.

A fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science, Professor Laurance has received a number of prestigious awards in recognition of his research and conservation activities, and earlier this year received the BBVA Frontiers in Ecology and Conservation Biology Award.

The award includes a cash prize of 200,000 euros (about $350,000), and is sometimes referred to as the ‘Nobel Prize’ for conservation biology.

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