Finding Climate-Water Solutions
February 12, 2025
Above: Participants at the Wilkes Center Hackathon 2025
Earlier this month, five French Université Côte d’Azur graduate students and two staff leaders traveled to the University of Utah to participate in a climate solutions “hackathon” organized by the Wilkes Center for Climate Science & Policy, and co-sponsored by the Office for Global Engagement, focused on water resiliency.
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Pearl Kling, international cooperation officer from Université Côte d’Azur, speaking with Dr. William Anderegg, director of the Wilkes Center for Climate Science & Policy.
The event fulfilled a newly formed U partnership with Université Côte d’Azur in Nice, France. France’s Région Provence-Alpes-Côte-d’Azur will host the 2030 Winter Olympic and Paralympic Games. Salt Lake City, Utah, will host them in 2034.
The climate solutions hackathon challenges undergraduate and graduate students from any discipline to team-up and develop proposals in a slide deck within 24 hours.
This year, the teams worked from Friday Jan. 31st until Saturday morning, Feb 1st.
The teams of three to five had a day to propose a solution via a slide deck and short presentation promptly due the next morning. The challenge was to propose an innovative, data-driven solution in one of five categories:s surrounding the water resiliency theme.
- Municipal Water Supply
- Inland and Coastal Flooding
- Agriculture
- Drought
- Water and Energy Infrastructure
Gathered in a bustling event hall in Crocker Science Center, the students engaged with expert faculty from both universities and drew inspiration from a video mentoring space of adept researchers. Mentors touched on important topics; for example, the U’s Marian Rice, associate director of Peak Water Sustainability Engine, spoke on topics such as partnering to protect watersheds and opportunities for green infrastructure. With approximately 88 students participating, 17 total slide decks were ultimately submitted.
On Saturday morning the teams reassembled to pitch their ideas to their peers at the Crocker Science Center, after which the group voted for the most impressive presentations. Two teams tied for this “People’s Choice Award.”
A panel of Wilkes Center staff and faculty, along with Professor Isabelle La Jeunesse from Université Côte d’Azur, deliberated over the weekend to officially select the top three proposals. Teams were evaluated according to four criteria:
- Problem definition and analysis
- Uniqueness and innovation
- Idea feasibility
- Implementation and scalability
“The ideas developed, particularly those of the finalists in this Hackathon, are realistic projects and thus potentially feasible,” said La Jeunesse. “It is therefore entirely possible that some of them will decide to get involved in developing their project, which would be fantastic given the great need in this field.”
Read the full story by Ross Chambless and Alexander Kellgreen, including a list of the winners in @ TheU.