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Dr Nevenka Bulovic

Affiliate of Centre for Environmental Responsibility in Mining
Centre for Environmental Responsibility in Mining
Faculty of Engineering, Architecture and Information Technology
Research Fellow/Senior Research officer
Sustainable Minerals Institute
Faculty of Engineering, Architecture and Information Technology
Availability:
Available for supervision

Dr Nevenka Bulovic is a water resource engineer and her current research focus is on improving the climate resilience of the mining sector in the face of climate change. This work applies state-of-the-art climate models to assess risks to water availability, mine site rehabilitation and pollution risks. Nevenka's other research passion is in using remotely sensed data and novel approaches for improving knowledge on hydroclimate in data sparse regions such as Australia and the Andes.

Nevenka Bulovic
Nevenka Bulovic

Dr Nathaniel Deering

Research Fellow
School of Civil Engineering
Faculty of Engineering, Architecture and Information Technology
Availability:
Available for supervision

Dr Nathaniel Deering is a Research Fellow in the School of Civil Engineering at The University of Queensland. His research examines hydrology, sediment transport and water quality processes in rivers, reservoirs, estuaries and coastal systems.

Nathaniel’s work focuses on how extreme and episodic events, such as floods, catchment disturbance and water-level fluctuations, drive sediment, nutrient and greenhouse gas fluxes. He uses field monitoring, process-based modelling and applied data analysis to understand hydrological and biogeochemical processes that are often missed by conventional monitoring approaches.

A central theme of his research is the role of short-duration, high-magnitude events and spatial hotspots in controlling sediment transport. This work has practical applications for drinking water management, reservoir sedimentation, source water protection and coastal water quality.

Nathaniel has expertise in event-driven sediment and nutrient transport, reservoir drawdown dynamics, greenhouse gas emissions from aquatic systems, adaptive monitoring and hydrological modelling. His research supports water utilities, regulators and environmental managers in developing more resilient and evidence-based approaches to water resource management in Australia and internationally.

Nathaniel Deering
Nathaniel Deering

Dr Jessica Eisma

Lecturer
School of Civil Engineering
Faculty of Engineering, Architecture and Information Technology
Availability:
Available for supervision

Jessica Eisma is an expert in community-engaged research in the context of sustainable urban water management. Her vision is to spark a shift toward hydrology-informed urban design spanning the lot to city scale through grounded, yet innovative research on nature-based solutions for managing urban flooding and on urban modification of rainfall. She seeks to uncover how urban development policy and practice contribute to the occurrence of flooding and to stimulate international dialogue on effective urban water management with nature-based solutions. She is committed to developing the information and resources necessary for urban planners and engineers to pursue practice and policy changes that will address significant infrastructural planning and design gaps related to infrastructure for urban water management. Her work will advance scientific evidence for the feedback between urban areas, the hydrosphere, and society and transform the way we approach urban development. In the face of climate change and burgeoning urban populations, such understanding is increasingly critical for managing the human and property costs associated with urban flooding.

Jessica Eisma
Jessica Eisma

Dr Vilim Filipović

Senior Lecturer
School of Agriculture and Food Sustainability
Faculty of Science
Availability:
Available for supervision

Dr. Vilim Filipović’s area of interest are in environmental soil science and ecohydrology with expertise in soil physical processes, vadose zone hydrology, contaminant/nutrient transport, and numerical modelling. His research explores the complex interactions between soil, water, and contaminants/nutrients, with applications in environmental sustainability, agricultural resilience, and mine rehabilitation. By integrating long-term field monitoring, experimental research, and computational modelling, his work assesses environmental pressures and evaluates management strategies for soil and water resources.

Dr. Filipović obtained his PhD in Environmental Soil Science and Hydrology from the University of Zagreb, Croatia. He has held academic and research positions in Europe and Australia, and still currently holds an Adjunct Associate Professor position at the University of Zagreb. In 2022, he joined The University of Queensland, where he contributes to research and teaching in environmental soil science, vadose zone ecohydrology, and numerical modelling.

With an extensive international network, Dr. Filipović has led numerous national and international research projects on soil-plant-atmosphere interactions, preferential flow, and contaminant fate in soil systems. His research collaborations span institutions in Australia, Europe, and North America, and he has been a visiting scholar at CSIRO (Australia), SLU (Sweden), Penn State University, University of California, University of Florida (USA), BOKU (Austria), and ZALF (Germany), among others.

At UQ, Dr. Filipović plays an active role in undergraduate and postgraduate education, employing a research-led teaching approach in environmental soil science. He coordinates and lectures in key courses, including LAND2003, AGRC7053, LAND3005, and GEOS1100, emphasizing hands-on field and laboratory experiences, active learning methodologies, and the integration of cutting-edge research into student learning.

Dr. Filipović is a recognized leader in his field, serving as an Associate Editor for the Soil Science Society of America Journal, Vadose Zone Journal and Applied Soil Ecology. His contributions have been acknowledged with prestigious awards, including the Soil Science Society of America Early Career Award (2019) Visiting Fellowship at the Leibniz Centre for Agricultural Landscape Research (2021) in Germany and CRC TiME Award winner for Outstanding Research Communication award (2024), among other recognitions.

Dr. Filipović has held significant leadership roles, including Head of Department at the University of Zagreb, leadership of a Critical Zone Observatory, panel membership for national science foundations, curriculum development, and various committee positions. His work continues to contribute to advancing soil science research, education, and environmental management on national and international scale.

Research Interests

  • Environmental sciences and agroecology
  • Preferential flow and non-equilibrium transport processes in heterogeneous soils
  • Fate of contaminants in soil (i.e., nutrients, pesticides, trace metals, pharmaceuticals)
  • Vadose (critical) zone processes
  • Soil physics and hydrology
  • Soil hydraulic properties estimation

Teaching

  • LAND2003 The Soil Environment (coordinator)
  • LAND3005 Soil Plant Relationships
  • AGRC7053 Sustainable Soil Management (coordinator)
  • GEOS1100 Environment & Society
Vilim Filipović
Vilim Filipović

Associate Professor Badin Gibbes

Associate Professor
School of Civil Engineering
Faculty of Engineering, Architecture and Information Technology
Availability:
Available for supervision

Badin is an environmental engineer with over 20 years’ experience in environmental hydrology and water resource engineering. In his current role with the University of Queensland’s School of Civil Engineering he leads a program of research that aims to support the sustainable management of water resources and aquatic ecosystems. This research seeks to quantify water flows and the associated transport of sediment and contaminants in environmental systems ranging from upland rivers and streams to lakes, estuaries and the near-coastal ocean as well as their connected groundwater systems. Badin employs a multi-disciplinary approach that combines the application of innovative environmental monitoring with a range of models to better understand how different factors influence water quality and ecosystem health in these systems.

Prior to joining the University of Queensland, Badin was active in engineering and environmental management roles within various local government, state government, not-for-profit and professional engineering consulting organisations. He applies this past industry experience in his current research activities, which are characterised by close collaboration with water management agencies, to deliver scientific information to support management decisions.

Badin also maintains an active involvement in the University of Queensland’s undergraduate and post-graduate teaching programs where he delivers lectures in various subjects including environmental engineering, hydrology, environmental risk assessment and modelling of surface water and groundwater systems. The experience gained in these roles enables him to communicate complex environmental information with a level of detail appropriate to a range of different audiences from community stakeholders to the engineering profession and regulatory agencies. Badin also supervises a number of post-graduate and undergraduate students who are pursuing research in the area of environmental hydrology and contaminant transport, with many focusing on the implications of forecast climate shifts on water resource management decisions.

Badin Gibbes
Badin Gibbes

Associate Professor Phil Hayes

Affiliate of UQ Centre for Natural Gas
UQ Gas & Energy Transition Research Centre
Faculty of Engineering, Architecture and Information Technology
Associate Professor
UQ Gas & Energy Transition Research Centre
Faculty of Engineering, Architecture and Information Technology
Availability:
Available for supervision
Phil Hayes
Phil Hayes

Dr Elin Jennings

Affiliate of Global Centre for Mineral Security
Global Centre for Mineral Security
Faculty of Engineering, Architecture and Information Technology
Affiliate of Centre for Environmental Responsibility in Mining
Centre for Environmental Responsibility in Mining
Faculty of Engineering, Architecture and Information Technology
Affiliate of W.H. Bryan Mining and Geology Research Centre
WH Bryan Mining Geology Research Centre
Faculty of Engineering, Architecture and Information Technology
Postdoctoral Research Fellow
Sustainable Minerals Institute
Faculty of Engineering, Architecture and Information Technology
Availability:
Available for supervision

Dr. Elin Jennings is an environmental geochemist specialising in mine waste transformation, metal(loid) contaminants, and sustainable mining practices. She is currently a Postdoctoral Research Fellow at the Sustainable Minerals Institute (SMI), University of Queensland, working within the Mine Waste Transformation Through Characterisation group and affiliated with the Centre for Environmental Responsibility in Mining. Currently, she is working on projects investigating the fate of indium in chalcopyrite (with successful Synchrotron Beamtime at ANSTO) and creating Metal-Organic Frameworks from Acid Mine Drainage (AMD). She also serves as project coordinator for the OreSand Knowledge Hub under the Global Centre for Mineral Security, where she leads communications, stakeholder engagement, and international collaboration.

Elin earned her PhD in Mining and Mineral Engineering from the University of Exeter’s Camborne School of Mines (2020–2025). Her doctoral research investigated the spatial and temporal fluxes of contaminants in acid mine drainage-impacted rivers, employing advanced analytical techniques including synchrotron-based XAS, SEM-EDX, ICP-OES, and GIS modelling. She has conducted beamline experiments at Diamond Light Source and ANSTO, receiving multiple competitive grants to explore critical mineral incorporation in chalcopyrite and arsenic transformations in sediments.

Following her PhD, Elin worked as a Graduate Research Assistant on the PAMANA project at the University of Exeter. This initiative examined the environmental and ecological impacts of mining on Philippine River systems. Her role focused on creating geochemical profiles of soils in the Agno Catchment, analysing how land use and geology influence contaminant distribution, and contributing to international collaborations on mining’s environmental footprint.

Her academic journey began with a BSc (First Class Honours) in Environmental Earth Science at Aberystwyth University, where she received the Rudler Exhibition Prize and the Mineralogical Society Student Award for outstanding achievement. She also secured the Walter Idris Bursary to conduct independent research on adsorption properties of coal and ochre.

Beyond research, Elin is passionate about teaching and outreach. She has taught hydrogeology and mine waste geochemistry at undergraduate and master’s levels, supervised student projects, and contributed to public engagement initiatives such as Engaging the Public with Environmental Science and Spark in STEM. She has presented at international conferences including Goldschmidt and MINEWA, and co-organised the Next Generation Resources conference, fostering collaboration among early-career researchers worldwide. She is also a collection editor for the special issue ES3 Geoscience and Circular Economy. In addition, she also works on the ECA committee at SMI.

Elin Jennings
Elin Jennings

Professor Neil McIntyre

Affiliate of Centre for Environmental Responsibility in Mining
Centre for Environmental Responsibility in Mining
Faculty of Engineering, Architecture and Information Technology
Affiliate of Minerals Industry Safety and Health Centre
Minerals Industry Safety and Health Centre
Faculty of Engineering, Architecture and Information Technology
Professorial Research Fellow
Sustainable Minerals Institute
Faculty of Engineering, Architecture and Information Technology
Availability:
Available for supervision

Neil is civil engineer with expertise in hydrology and water resources. He splits his time between the Centre for Water in the Minerals Industry and the School of Civil Engineering. His current research interests include water resource systems modelling, understanding impacts of mining on water resources, remote sensing applications in hydrology and stochastic hydrology. Neil graduated with a BEng in Civil Engineering from Edinburgh University in 1990 and then worked for seven years in the Scottish pubic sector on wastewater treatment and disposal scheme design and construction. He obtained an MSc in Environmental Engineering in 1998 then a PhD in water quality modeling at Imperial College. Neil worked at Imperial as a Lecturer and Reader in Surface Water Hydrology between 2001 and 2013. This included teaching water quality, hydrometry, hydraulics, and water resources engineering; and a 5-year spell as Director of the Hydrology MSc program. His research there focused on surface water quality, uncertainty in modelling, land use management impacts, and hydrological up-scaling and regionalisation. While most of Neil’s research has been UK and Australia-based, international activity has included projects in Thailand, Uganda, Botswana, Peru, Chile, Colombia, Mongolia and China. He has been a member of the British Hydrological Society national committee, the ICE’s Water Expert Panel, and the NERC Peer Review College. He was won several awards, including the Institution of Civil Engineer’s Baker Medal and RA Carr Award for water resources research. He held an ARC Future Fellowship from 2014-2019.

Neil McIntyre
Neil McIntyre

Dr Mojtaba Rajabi

UQ Amplify Senior Lecturer
School of the Environment
Faculty of Science
Availability:
Available for supervision
Media expert

Dr Mojtaba Rajabi has over 15 years of extensive experience in crustal stress analysis, geomechanics, geomechanical-numerical modelling and petrophysics. He graduated with a Ph.D. in Earth Sciences from the University of Adelaide in 2017. Dr Rajabi has worked on the geomechanical analyses of >30 sedimentary basins from across the world including Australia, New Zealand, Middle East, Mozambique, Iceland and Western Mediterranean. Since 2012, Dr Rajabi has worked on the Australian and World Stress Map projects, and currently is the Deputy-Head of the World Stress Map project. Dr Rajabi has received over 15 prestigious awards and prizes for his research including the ARC-DECRA Award, the Australian SEG Early Achievement Award, EAGE Louis Cagniard Award, EGU TS Division Outstanding Early Career Scientist Award, the Royal Society of South Australia's H.G. Andrewartha Medal, and the International Lithosphere Program’s Flinn-Hart Award.

Mojtaba Rajabi
Mojtaba Rajabi

Dr Louisa Rochford

Affiliate of Centre for Environmental Responsibility in Mining
Centre for Environmental Responsibility in Mining
Faculty of Engineering, Architecture and Information Technology
Affiliate of Leading for High Reliability Centre
Leading for High Reliability Centre
Faculty of Engineering, Architecture and Information Technology
Senior Research Fellow
Sustainable Minerals Institute
Faculty of Engineering, Architecture and Information Technology
Availability:
Available for supervision

Louisa is a hydrogeologist with twenty years of experience. She has had a diverse career working in research, consulting, and government. Louisa’s main areas of expertise include hydrogeological investigations, impact assessment, groundwater resource management, and contaminated land management. She has worked across a range of sectors including mining, energy, transport, and agriculture and her experience includes developing water resources legislation and policy and leading complex groundwater and surface water investigations for project approvals, operations, and compliance.

Louisa is currently working as a Senior Research Fellow at the Centre for Environmental Responsibility in Mining (CERM). The role involves leading the hydrogeological research, training, and consulting services that CERM provide to the minerals industry in Australia and globally and working with a team of water resource management specialists to contribute to a range of inter-discplinary projects. She has recently completed a project for The Australian National University developing draft National Guidelines for Groundwater Monitoring in Australia.

Louisa Rochford
Louisa Rochford

Dr Qi Shao

Affiliate of Julius Kruttschnitt Mineral Research Centre
Julius Kruttschnitt Mineral Research Centre
Faculty of Engineering, Architecture and Information Technology
Postdoctoral Research Fellow
Sustainable Minerals Institute
Faculty of Engineering, Architecture and Information Technology
Availability:
Available for supervision

Dr Qi Shao is a Postdoctoral Research Fellow at the Julius Kruttschnitt Mineral Research Centre (JKMRC), where his primary research focus is on modelling mineral separation processes using Computational Fluid Dynamics (CFD) simulations. His recent work has applied CFD to a range of mineral separation equipment, including the Teeter Bed Separator, CrossFlow, HydroFloat, conventional mechanical flotation cells, and the Jameson Cell. By examining hydrodynamics and performance across varying operating conditions and equipment designs, his research aims to enhance separation efficiency, reduce energy consumption, and boost productivity.

Dr Shao earned his PhD in Environmental Engineering from The University of Queensland, where he developed numerical models using Cellular Automata to simulate hydrological processes in mining landforms. Following his PhD, he continued at UQ as a Postdoctoral Research Fellow, investigating fluid-particle interactions in hydraulic erosion of granular structures through coupled CFD and Discrete Element Method (DEM) simulations.

Prior to his current role, Dr Shao conducted research at the University of Melbourne, focusing on numerical simulations of solute transport and multiphase flows in heterogeneous porous media. His work addressed critical environmental and engineering challenges, including contaminant transport, geological CO₂ sequestration, and groundwater flow dynamics.

Dr Shao’s expertise spans a wide array of numerical methods, including Finite Element Method (FEM), Finite Volume Method (FVM), DEM, Cellular Automata, and Discrete Event Simulation, which he applies to solve complex problems across environmental and mineral engineering domains.

Qi Shao
Qi Shao

Dr Ralph Trancoso

Adjunct Associate Professor
School of the Environment
Faculty of Science
Availability:
Available for supervision
Ralph Trancoso
Ralph Trancoso

Associate Professor Ryan Turner

Associate Professor - Pollution Science in Aquatic and Marine Environments
School of the Environment
Faculty of Science
Availability:
Available for supervision
Media expert

Associate Professor Ryan Turner is the Director of the Reef Catchments Science Partnership at the University of Queensland (a partnership with the Department of the Environment, Tourism, Science and Innovation). Ryan was previously the Department's Principal Scientist for Water Quality and Investigations and held an Adjunct Associate Professor role at Queensland University of Technology in the Managing for Resilient Landscapes, Institute for Future Environments. For 14 years, Ryan managed multimillion-dollar water quality monitoring programs that assessed the impacts of sediments, nutrients, and pesticides in numerous catchments along the Queensland coast, which discharge into the Great Barrier Reef and Moreton Bay. Ryan has served on several steering committees and technical advisory panels, including the Great Barrier Reef Foundation's Technical Advisory Panel. He has published extensively (>80 papers and reports) and led several collaborative research projects between the Queensland Government and academia. Ryan previously supervised analytical chemistry and microbiology laboratories in the private and public sectors. Ryan has developed numerous methodologies and standard operating procedures for analytical and monitoring techniques (water quality, sediments and soils). Ryan’s passion for the future of water security is what keeps him striving forward.

Ryan Turner
Ryan Turner

Dr Chenming Zhang

Advanced Queensland Industry Research Fellow
School of Civil Engineering
Faculty of Engineering, Architecture and Information Technology
Availability:
Available for supervision

Dr Chenming Zhang is a specialist in monitoring and modelling hydrological processes in coastal/terrestrial groundwater systems and tailings storage facilities, in particular the evaporation induced mass and heat transport in soil/tailings, hydrogeochemical dynamics in aquifer systems and wast rock dumps. He has been developing IoT-based geotechnical and environmental instruments to monitor continuously and in real-time the weather, soil and water conditions.

Chenming Zhang
Chenming Zhang