Meaningful Conversations with Annyse
The World Is Full of Nice People Trying to Do Nice Things - Ana Carolina Maganha de Almeid on Water, Green Lands & the Human Work About this episode What does the future of water actually require of us? In this episode, Annyse sits down with Ana Carolina Maganha de Almeid for a conversation that moves from a single card ("Mystery") to green landscapes, the power of community, the wave of regulation coming for Europe's water, and a deceptively simple insight: the hardest problems we face aren't technological - they're human. Ana brings the precision of a microbiologist and the optimism of someone who keeps looking for the people doing things right. The result is a conversation that's clear-eyed about the challenges and genuinely hopeful about the people rising to meet them. By the end, you may find yourself wanting to go and find the good work happening near you and ask how it got started. About the guest Ana Carolina Maganha de Almeida is a senior regulatory and environmental consultant. A biologist with a PhD in Microbiology from Trinity College Dublin, she is an expert in EU water and environmental law and runs her own consultancy supporting clients with regulatory strategy and compliance intelligence - helping them prepare for upcoming water and wastewater legislation. Originally from São Paulo, Ana studied biology in Brazil before continuing her research journey in Germany and then Ireland, where she completed a PhD in drinking-water treatment and spent eleven years before moving into industry. She is now living in Italy and is passionate about translating biology into work that is genuinely useful for people and companies - the place, as she puts it, where science gets to be used. What we cover * Why Ana chose the "Mystery" card and how the colour green became the heart of the conversation * Water protection as the protection of green lands on the surface and underneath * What Ireland's National Federation of Group Water Schemes reveals about community stewardship of water * Why communities (and the leaders within them) have to be cultivated * Ana's path from biology in São Paulo to regulatory strategy in Europe * The EU urban wastewater legislation raising the bar for utilities - PFAS, pharmaceuticals and beyond * Why the real barrier to progress is human, not technological * The communication gap in science and how evidence gets blurred with fear * Where Ana's optimism comes from: best-in-class work, and the humans behind it * "The leaders of tomorrow are the ones who can foster community." Mentions * National Federation of Group Water Schemes (Ireland) - Home - National Federation of Group Water Schemes [https://nfgws.ie/] * EU Urban Wastewater Treatment Directive - Directive - EU - 2024/3019 - EN - EUR-Lex [https://eur-lex.europa.eu/eli/dir/2024/3019/oj/eng] * CUWA - California Urban Water Agencies [https://www.cuwa.org/] * PFAS - PFAS Explained | US EPA [https://www.epa.gov/pfas/pfas-explained] * Secondary water treatment - Secondary Treatment - an overview | ScienceDirect Topics [https://www.sciencedirect.com/topics/engineering/secondary-treatment] * Ecotoxicology - Ecotoxicology: Overview - HSE [https://www.hse.gov.uk/pesticides/data-requirements-handbook/ecotoxicology.htm] * Circular economy - The Circular Economy | CIRCULÉIRE [https://www.circuleire.ie/the-circular-economy]
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