Triggered by the comprehensive presentation of recent achievements in the Panta Rhei Synthesis Book we organize this Townhall meeting at EGU26 to (i) present the key results and methodological advances in a highly accessible way, (ii) connect researchers across EGU divisions who work on hydrology, hazards, climate impacts, ecology, and socio-environmental systems, and (iii) discuss and identify concrete next steps for advancing research on the coevolution in Coupled Human–Water Systems. The target audience includes hydrologists and interdisciplinary modelers, practitioners and decision-support developers, and, importantly, early career scientists and students seeking a roadmap for coupled human–water systems research and training.
The session will combine a brief overview of the key results via lightning talks by editors and authors of the Panta Rhei synthesis book, followed by a moderated open discussion. The discussion will focus on actionable outcomes: (1) priority research questions and benchmark challenges for coupled human–water systems prediction; (2) shared needs for data, models, and evaluation protocols; (3) pathways to translate sociohydrological insights into operational practice; and (4) community-building actions within EGU (e.g., follow-up activities, teaching resources, and future session themes).
Schedule
19:00-19:02 Khosro Morovati - Welcome
19:02-19:05 Heidi Kreibich - Introduction to coupled human-water systems
19:05-19:10 Marlies Barendrecht - Systems thinking: phenomena and archetypes
19:10-19:15 Alberto Viglione – Human-water systems with focus on Human-flood systems
19:15-19:20 María José Polo Gomez - The widening world of Panta Rhei case studies
19:20-19:25 Murugesu Sivapalan – Grand synthesis
19:25-19:55 Discussion
19:55-20:00 Günter Blöschl – What we should do next and closure
Speakers
- Khosro Morovati, Tsinghua University, China
- Heidi Kreibich, GFZ Helmholtz Centre for Geosciences, Germany
- Marlies H Barendrecht, King's College London, United Kingdom
- Alberto Viglione, Politecnico di Torino, Italy
- María José Polo, University of Cordoba, Spain
- Murugesu Sivapalan, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign 220 Davenport, United States of America
- Günter Blöschl, TU Wien, Austria