BGS Global Geoscience

BGS’s international geological activities, now renamed as BGS Global Geoscience, have been a cornerstone of BGS work for more than a century. As the recently appointed Science Director for BGS Global Geoscience, this magazine provides a welcome opportunity to introduce myself and to highlight the co...

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Bibliographic Details
Format: Report
Language:English
Published: British Geological Survey 2013
Subjects:
Online Access:http://nora.nerc.ac.uk/id/eprint/517756/
https://nora.nerc.ac.uk/id/eprint/517756/1/InternationalMagazine2013.pdf
http://www.bgs.ac.uk/research/international/home.html
Description
Summary:BGS’s international geological activities, now renamed as BGS Global Geoscience, have been a cornerstone of BGS work for more than a century. As the recently appointed Science Director for BGS Global Geoscience, this magazine provides a welcome opportunity to introduce myself and to highlight the continuing breadth of BGS overseas applied research and survey. Since I last worked overseas in the late 1990s, BGS’s work on the international stage has witnessed significant change. Traditional overseas placements funded by UK aid gave way in the 2000s to large, mainly World Bank funded, non-residential mapping projects. Over time, increased competition and the price sensitivities became ever more telling and it was increasingly apparent that if BGS was to remain active in this area we would need to review the appropriateness of our business model. As a consequence of this review, in 2010 BGS set up a spin-out company (International Geoscience Services Ltd – currently trading a BGSi). Thus, as traditional international mapping surveys have declined, our focus has shifted from traditional survey work to developing research and scientific applications. For example, the United Arab Emirates survey, which commenced 10 years ago as a mapping programme, now funds more applied research focused on urban and developmental resource issues. Responding to global science and environmental drivers, the current BGS science strategy (2009–2014) gives priority to activities that increase our understanding of environmental processes particularly in developing countries. Exchanging know-how, building capacity for alleviation of resource poverty, and living with environmental hazards, are key. With these visions in mind, throughout 2011 to 2012, BGS has pursued the range of project activities described herein. They focus on water and mineral resources, volcano and tsunami- related geohazards research, new monitoring activities combining ice and fire in Iceland, and expanding our geomagnetic network in South Georgia. For survey research ...