One of largest World Tunnel Congress events ever
• 3,000 registered delegates both in-person and online
• More than 60 countries of the world represented
• More than 200 exhibitors in a vast exhibition hall
• High ranking officials of China in attendance
• Special guests represent the United Nations
• A clarion call Muir Wood Lecture
• Roundtables on vital topics
• More than 200 papers presented in five simultaneous sessions
• More than 300 Poster Session presentations
• Eight organized Technical Tour visits
• ITA celebration of its 50th year Anniversary
• ITA business progressed at ITA General Assembly
• Embedded photos available in hi-res jpg format
• Linked videos available for download and
republishing on request
• Contact Media@ITA-AITES.org for information
China wows as host of the World Tunnel Congress 2024
China’s remarkable urban development and importantly, its
rapid underground infrastructure expansion, was on show when the international
underground construction industry gathered for the World Tunnel Congress in
Shenzhen. Delegates up to 3,000 representing 60 different countries heard from
leading central and local Government officials of China and from
representatives of the United Nations about how it is clear that at all levels
the underground dimension are vital to the efficient and healthy functioning of
society and for addressing critical issues that confront the global community
currently.
Hosted this year by the Tunnel and Underground Engineering
Branch of the China Civil Engineering Society Ms Jinxiu Jenny Yan, Immediate
Past President of the ITA and Co-chair of the Organising Committee, was
honoured to welcome senior Government officials of China and officials of the
United Nations to the event, including Mr Ni Hong, Minister of Housing and
Urban[1]Rural
Development of the People’s Republic of China; Mr Michal Mlynár, Assistant
Secretary General of the United Nations
and Acting Executive Director of UN-Habitat; Mr Sheng Ying, National Officer of
UN-Habitat China; and Mr Qin Weizhong, Mayor of Shenzhen.
At a packed Opening Ceremony, honoured guest Minister Ni
Hong described how China’s investment in underground infrastructure has
improved the lives of millions across the country and how his Ministry is
facing the real challenges of the coming decades arising from continuing urban expansion,
the real and present effects of evident climate change and the urgent and
continuing need for urban and rural connectivity.
The Congress theme itself – Tunnelling for a Better Life –
recognises the indisputable fact that underground infrastructure underpins all
endeavours to improve living conditions at all society levels and is vital for
sustaining communities and protecting the natural environment.
In a one-on-one meeting, Minister Ni Hong expressed to ITA
President Dix his appreciation of the work of the ITA (International Tunnelling
and Underground Space Association) and its commitment to promoting underground
opportunities and alternatives worldwide.
President Dix assured Minister Ni Hong continuing ITA cooperation
in supporting China’s expansion of underground
infrastructure and its rapid advances in excavation and underground
infrastructure management technologies.
In speaking of his work with the United Nations, Mr Michal
Mlynár communicated his concern for the fate of the underprivileged of this
world in the face of mounting inequity and the threat of more frequent natural disasters
- floods, droughts, food shortages, desperate housing conditions - that increase the number
of humans and refugees on the move searching for a better life. He was grateful
for the invitation to join the WTC and to become more consciously aware of the
underground space construction industry and its work that is instrumental in
uplifting people from poverty and providing the foundation for improving human
life.
Warnings of similar and expanded themes continued in the
Muir Wood Lecture presentation delivered this year by Professor Dr Prescilla P
Nelson of the USA and Colorado School of Mines.
Titled Underground Resources for a Sustainable Global Future
and presented in her inimitable style, Dr Nelson spoke frankly, earnestly and
without pulling any punches. Among the many highlights of her pointed treatise
that included clear and accredited facts about the inequality of human existence across the world, Dr Nelson,
as an educator, presented stark evidence of the state of the work force in
engineering and lack of qualified professionals, particularly in developed countries.
“There is a generation of engineers coming to retirement and will never be
replaced. We simply are not educating those who could take over.” As an
example, Dr Nelson illustrated that one university of mining in China produces
more qualified mining engineers in a year than all the universities of mining
study in the USA combined. “In the future, the new generation of mining engineers
will be Chinese,” was the reality check.
The keynote lecture by Professor Dr Hehua Zhu of
Geotechnical Engineering at Tongji University, Shanghai, discussed the
Development and Applications of Intelligent Tunnel Construction: The
State-of-the-art and Future Perspectives. The presentation demonstrated how
advanced China is in developing intelligent tunnelling systems to reduce the
uncertainties in the excavation process and improve the quality, safety, and
operating durability of creating and managing underground public
infrastructure.
Two plenary Roundtable discussions explored first the
Challenges and Path of Developing Future Tunnelling Technology. Moderated by
Andre Assis (far left) of Brazil and a past resident of ITA, with panellists
(from left) Rick Lovat, Canada; Jenny Jinxiu Yan, China; François Renault, France;
Wojciech Mleczko, Poland; and Goh Kok Hun, Singapore, all agreed that
introducing new innovations into the industry can only be achieved with team
work and that the “team” includes owners and financiers.
The second Roundtable discussion considered the use of
Tunnels and Underground Space Towards Sustainable Development. Moderated by
Sanja Zlatanic of USA and Andrea Pigorini of Italy, the panellists included Mrs
Buniyamin, WFEO-World Federation of Engineering Organizations Executive Council
Member from Malaysia; ITA President Arnold Dix, Australia; Ke Fang, Director
General of the Implementation Monitoring Department of the AIIB-Asia
Infrastructure Investment Bank; Samuel Huckle, Member of the ITA Young Steering
Board and a civil engineer; Sheng Ying, National Officer of UN-Habitat China
Office; and Alexis de Pomerol, Société des Grands Projets (SGP) of France. The
upshot of the discussion was that the excavated underground space is not the
thing – the thing is the ultimate purpose of that underground space and of how
it will impact the lives of the many. The task of the engineer is to design and
excavate that space as efficiently, safely and cost effectively as possible and
to pass over an underground structure that is fit for purpose, durable, and
maintenance efficient.
For the ITA family, the big occasion of the Congress was the
celebration of the Association’s 50th year anniversary. This was commemorated
in a special plenary session at which all 17 Presidents of the Association
since its founding in 1974 were honoured. Seven of the 17 were in person at the
WTC in Shenzhen – Günter Girnau, Germany, 1980-1983; Alfred Haack, Germany,
1998-2001; Andre Assis, Brazil, 2001-2004 (far right); In Mo Lee, S Korea, 2010-2013;
Soren Eiskesen, Denmark, 2013-2016; Jenny Jinxiu Yan, China, 2019-2022; and
current President Arnold Dix of Australia, 2022-2025. All are joined in the
photograph by current and past members of the ITA Executive Council.
+
Another four Past Presidents were present via a video
presentation - Einar Broch, Norway, 1986-1989; Sebastiano Pelizza, Italy,
1995-1998; Martin Knights, UK, 2007-2010; and Tarcisio Celestino, Brazil,
2016-2019. Another six were remembered in spirit – Founding President Alan Muir
Wood of UK, 1974-1977; Heinz Fischer, Switzerland, 1977-1980; Jack Lemley, USA,
1983-1986; Colin Kirkland, UK, 1989-1992; Dan Zdenek Eisenstein, Canada,
1992-1995; and Harvey Parker, USA, 2004-2007. Each of the Presidents in person
recalled the memorable achievement of their presidency and expressed their
hopes for the future of the Association. So much has happened over the past 50
years, they all agreed, not least the invention of computers, mobile phones and
websites, and their wish for the future - that the Association remains an
inclusive professional group where politics remain and the door and that the
differences of the expanding family of Member Nations – now 80 with the welcome
of the Philippians at this 2024 ITA General Assembly – continues to be
embracing, with all helping each other in their underground infrastructure development
aspirations and needs.
The celebration continued with launch of a booklet charting
the history of the ITA in more than 1000 photographs, and publication of a book
celebrating the 50 Iconic Projects of the last 50 years and supported by a
video of the same content.
Together with these conference highlights, the delegates of
the Congress discovered a vast array of equipment, machines, materials, new
systems and services exhibited by the companies present in huge exhibition
hall. It would take a week or more to do justice to the exhibits on display by
the internationals and the significant and impressive contingent of Chinese
companies.
At the same time, the work of the ITA and its management and
activity by Working Groups, Committees, task forces, executives and the
secretariate support staff continued at this WTC and General Assembly, bringing
forward new options for individual membership of the Association, a new
category of Observer Nation for those countries wanting to follow a pathway to
full membership, and updating the corporate body on the financial health of the
organisation.
At the closing ceremony on Wednesday, there was warm and
heartfelt thanks to host Member Nation China for staging such an impressive and
enjoyable event – 34 years after hosting the international ITA meeting in Chengdu
in 1990 – and the baton for the next WTC and General Assembly was passed to
Member Nation Sweden for an event to be staged in Stockholm in May 2025. The
Gala Dinner closed out proceedings and delegates began bidding each other
farewell for this year or joined technical tours for a last chance to marvel at
the work being achieved in China as the busiest tunnelling nation on earth - by
far - at present.
We meet again next year!
luismart_ic@yahoo.com.mx
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