15 Minute Maps

Episode 23: Willa Sumer - Wildlife and water... Tackling a Californian Crisis

20 min · 25. maj 2026
episode Episode 23: Willa Sumer - Wildlife and water... Tackling a Californian Crisis cover

Description

Why do biologists wake up at 4 AM to look for birds? And what does that have to do with California’s housing crisis? In this episode, California based GIS analyst and conservation expert Willa Sumer takes us inside the world of wildlife surveys, mitigation banking, nature conservation and environmental regulation. She explains why early morning field work is non-negotiable (rattlesnakes, reclusive species, and nesting season), how GIS helps developers avoid wiping out endangered habitats, and the idea of “selling” restored land to offset construction impacts. All this under the fascinating idea of 'Mitigation Banking' a topic I must admit I had never heard of.  Willa also pulls back the curtain on California’s manipulated landscape and reveals data is so difficult to access, and when it is available, why its hard to implement actionable plans. If you’ve ever wondered whether conservation can coexist with affordable housing, this episode is for you. LINKS: Willa's personal site [https://www.willasumergis.com] LinkedIn [https://www.linkedin.com/in/wsumer/]

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25 episodes

episode Episode 25 - Momin Ashraf: The Foggara System artwork

Episode 25 - Momin Ashraf: The Foggara System

Forget Silicon Valley. The most innovative "smart technology" for water management might have been invented 1,500 years ago in the Algerian desert. Host Hugo Powell welcomes Momin Ashraf—Oxford graduate, Esri Young Scholar Award winner, and GIS consultant at Satellite Applications Catapult. Momin has done the impossible: using synthetic aperture radar to spot fuel trucks in the desert and tracking human trafficking via informal mines. But his dream map is something entirely different. He wants to build a dynamic, interactive visualization of the Foggara system—an ancient, gravity-fed underground water network that communities have used for centuries across North Africa and Asia. Why? Because modern French-colonial dams and canals are losing 50% of Algeria's water. Meanwhile, the Fugara's secret isn't just engineering—it's a radical social justice philosophy where downstream communities hold the power, and "water elders" negotiate allocations face-to-face. This episode is a takedown of Cartesian reductionism, a love letter to indigenous knowledge, and a warning about fighting "12 rounds with Mother Nature." Plus, Momin offers early-career GIS pros a simple roadmap through the noise (hint: start with ArcGIS/QGIS, then Python, then have fun).

Yesterday23 min
episode Episode 24 - Éloïse Neff: All Terrain GIS artwork

Episode 24 - Éloïse Neff: All Terrain GIS

What if the best map isn't a map at all—but the system that makes mapping effortless? Eloise Neff spent seven years at Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) building geographic information systems from the ground up. But when asked for her dream map, she has a surprising answer: she doesn't have one. Instead, she wants something better. A dream information system. In this episode, Eloise—an engineer turned GIS manager—explains why the "...information system" part of GIS is too often forgotten. She argues that most analysts spend more time fighting their software than solving problems. Her vision? A flexible, sustainable, secure system that matches your actual needs (not your vendor's sales pitch). She walks us through the delicate balance between flexibility and sustainability, the critical role of ETLs, and why data protection in humanitarian contexts can be a matter of life and death. She also shares hard-won wisdom on navigating the headquarters vs. field divide, why GIS professionals are uniquely positioned to bridge both worlds, and the single most important skill that has nothing to do with technology: truly listening. > "An information system is not a magic wand. The tool is one thing. The knowledge of the people is everything." * Why GIS is first an information system, second a mapping tool * The Ferrari vs. 4x4 philosophy of system design * Flexibility vs. sustainability: the eternal trade-off * ETLs explained (extract, transform, load) * Data as a weapon: information security in humanitarian contexts * Headquarters vs. field—and why GIS sits perfectly in between * The lost art of listening to users

31. maj 202621 min
episode Episode 23: Willa Sumer - Wildlife and water... Tackling a Californian Crisis artwork

Episode 23: Willa Sumer - Wildlife and water... Tackling a Californian Crisis

Why do biologists wake up at 4 AM to look for birds? And what does that have to do with California’s housing crisis? In this episode, California based GIS analyst and conservation expert Willa Sumer takes us inside the world of wildlife surveys, mitigation banking, nature conservation and environmental regulation. She explains why early morning field work is non-negotiable (rattlesnakes, reclusive species, and nesting season), how GIS helps developers avoid wiping out endangered habitats, and the idea of “selling” restored land to offset construction impacts. All this under the fascinating idea of 'Mitigation Banking' a topic I must admit I had never heard of.  Willa also pulls back the curtain on California’s manipulated landscape and reveals data is so difficult to access, and when it is available, why its hard to implement actionable plans. If you’ve ever wondered whether conservation can coexist with affordable housing, this episode is for you. LINKS: Willa's personal site [https://www.willasumergis.com] LinkedIn [https://www.linkedin.com/in/wsumer/]

25. maj 202620 min
episode Episode 22: Mathew Roberts - Where the Money Flows artwork

Episode 22: Mathew Roberts - Where the Money Flows

What if you could see exactly where the world’s money goes—in real time? From Swiss bank accounts to mobile money in Sierra Leone, and from colonial resource extraction to modern "resource nationalism," this episode pulls back the curtain on the hidden flows that shape global inequality. Host Hugo sits down with Matthew Roberts, Head of Geography at the International School of Geneva (and Hugo’s alma mater). Matthew shares a provocative dream map: a real-time, interactive visualization of global capital, resource wealth, and historical injustices. They discuss how AI is changing the classroom, the "geography of hope" needed to fight student eco-anxiety, and why a pen, paper, and clipboard are still the most vital tools in fieldwork. Plus, Matthew introduces the work of Social Income—proving that just 1% of your income can create a direct line of solidarity across continents. LINKS: Social Income [https://socialincome.org/en/int] Mathew's Linkedin [https://www.linkedin.com/in/matthew-roberts-ch/]

18. maj 202620 min
episode Episod 21: Max Malynowsky - Offline is the New Online artwork

Episod 21: Max Malynowsky - Offline is the New Online

What if humanitarians had an offline-first mapping tool as reliable as a Garmin GPS? In this episode, Max Malynowsky — software engineer at the OCHA Centre for Humanitarian Data — dreams out loud about a future where field teams can sync trusted, up-to-date geodata anywhere, even with near-zero bandwidth. From the chaos of contested admin boundaries to the quiet genius of ODK and XLS forms, Max and Hugo unpack why the hardest part isn't building the app — it's building the data infrastructure behind it. If you've ever tried to print 20,000 settlements or wished for a universal translator for geodata, this one's for you. Links:  Max's LinkedIn [https://www.linkedin.com/in/maxym-malynowsky/] HDX [https://data.humdata.org] OCHA Centre for Humanitarian Data [https://centre.humdata.org]

5. maj 202620 min