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	  News in 2025
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	G'day to Brisbane and Aussie-land - FIG Working Week 2025 report
		Brisbane, Australia 6-10 April 2025
		Brisbane, Australia is the perfect city for a conference. The 
		conference centre BCEC is located in the city centre, hotels are in 
		close proximity and in walking distance to BCEC, and the newly opened 
		walking bridge between the north and south part of the city makes 
		walking even easier. The bridge was used frequently by the participants, 
		to and from hotels, and for the Welcome Reception held on the north side 
		in the 7th floor open-air lawn between the Star Brisbane Resort’s four 
		towers. Several technical walking tours were organised, the gala dinner 
		was held in the newly renovated and beautiful main hall of the town 
		hall, also in walking distance, and to make use of the water, too, a 
		survey vessel was sailing up and down the river with Working Week 
		participants.
		
		
		
		Legacy projects
		Survey Mark in Brisbane
		At the south side of the walking bridge, in recognition of the FIG 
		Working Week and Locate25, a special survey mark was installed and 
		revealed on Monday morning 7 April, right before the Opening Ceremony.
		The permanent survey mark (PSM) has been installed by the Queensland 
		Government, near the start of the South Bank end of the Neville Bonner 
		Bridge that spans the Brisbane River. The PSM signifies the role played 
		by surveying and spatial sciences in urban development, infrastructure 
		projects and land management.
		The PSM was officially unveiled by Steve Jacoby, Conference Convenor 
		and Executive Director, Spatial Information | Georesources in the 
		Queensland Department of Natural Resources and Mines, Manufacturing and 
		Regional and Rural Development, together with FIG President Diane 
		Dumashie. For FIG it is important to include legacy projects in our 
		conferences and at each destination. This is one of the strengths by 
		moving the FIG Working Week around the world each year to different 
		countries and cities. Permanent Survey Marks are fundamental to the 
		alignment of spatial data with physical infrastructure, enabling 
		accurate mapping, land surveys and large-scale construction projects.
		
		
		School teachers, SDGs and She Maps
		Other legacy projects during the Working Week included special drone 
		sessions with school teachers and a special focus on the SDGs in the 
		technical programme, hereunder one session each day with specific focus 
		on Private Sector Contributions to the SDGs, the crucial role of 
		governments to achieve SDGs and the nexus between SDGs and Professional 
		Education in the Geospatial World,  as well as special  
		displays of FIG and GCA on the enormous screens of the Cube, the 
		technical university area.
		The two FIG Task Forces on Diversity and Inclusion and FIG and the 
		SDGs, in collaboration with She Maps, organised a touching legacy 
		project which will stand as a lasting testament to this event. They had 
		developed a visual piece that connects past, present and future: 
		comparative images of Brisbane in 1975 and 2025, which was accompanied 
		by a commemorative plaque. This legacy is not just a frame with images, 
		but a visual story that reminds us how much a city can change, and how 
		essential geospatial technologies are to understand that change. Beyond 
		that, it leaves behind something tangible for the next generation. There 
		is a need for teachers who inspire, we need images that tell stories, 
		and we need young people to see themselves as part of the change.
		
		
		
		Meeting in Australia
		Around 1,400 national and international participants from 85 
		countries found their way to Brisbane, located in Queensland, Australia. 
		Queensland Government was a central partner for the conference, with 
		Executive Director Steve Jacoby, Queensland Government, as Conference 
		Convenor. The conference thanks him and his staff for their amazing 
		involvement and input, both to the technical programme, they organised 
		all technical tours, and arranged with a survey vessel that was 
		available during all three conference days, and which had many curious 
		participants on board. FIG commission 4 delegates (Hydrography 
		surveying) had a particular interest in the vessel – however missed 
		their appointment as they could not find their way to the landing stage. 
		An extra tour was organised for them.
		The local organisers in Brisbane, with Peter James in the lead, had 
		secured special spots for the welcome reception, gala dinner, as well as 
		invaluable contact to the universities in Brisbane and further input to 
		the technical and social programme.
		
		Sponsors and exhibitors
		A good number of national and international sponsors and exhibitors 
		filled out the bust hallways of the Plaza floor at BCEC. Many with 
		creative and impressive stands, and with the exhibitors located in the 
		hallways there was a constant flow of participants around the stands. 
		Many constructive conversations were held, and the exhibitors seemed to 
		be busy at most times. 
		Both large and smaller stands were to be found, even small 1x2 
		display pods which seemed to be quite popular.
		A very large thanks to all sponsors and exhibitors – without you the 
		conference would not have been possible.
		
		
		
		Opening Ceremony 
		The local organisers had ensured a powerful opening with Songwoman 
		Aunty Maroochy, an Elder and the Songwoman and Law-woman of the Turrbal 
		People, the original inhabitants of Brisbane, and the Dippil people of 
		the Sunshine Coast area. She is a direct descendant of Daki Yakka – 
		Chief of the Old Brisbane tribe. She told and sang the story of her 
		ancestors from the region. 
		Hereafter the honourable Anderew Powell MP Minister for the 
		Environment and Tourism, and Minister for Science and Innovation took 
		over the stage welcoming the conference to Brisbane, highlighting the 
		importance of the work of surveyors and geospatial experts. Conference 
		Convenor Steve Jacoby, competently guided all 1,400 participants through 
		the opening ceremony as Master of Ceremony. Kate Lundy, Chair of the 
		Board of GCA welcomed all to Brisbane and Australia, with an exciting 
		merge of the national event Locate25 with FIG Working Week 2025, hoping 
		that both national and international participants will learn from each 
		other and share good time together. Peter James, chair of the LOC, held 
		an address on behalf of his father, Earl James, who is Honorary 
		President of FIG (read more about Earl James experiences in FIG in FIG 
		publication 75).  A both fun and amazing conference theme song was 
		written and performed by Martin Brabec, Australia (QR code). 
		FIG President Diane Dumashie was final speaker at the Opening Ceremony, 
		which was concluded with the FIG Fanfare which marked the conference to 
		be opened. After the opening ceremony the dignitaries declared the 
		exhibition open and walked through the exhibition talking with the 
		various exhibitors.
		
		
		
			
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		Plenary sessions
		Two-hour plenary sessions were organised, packed with presentations 
		and discussions. At each of the plenary sessions four high-level 
		presenters gave their input under the overall theme of Collaboration, 
		Innovation and Resilience: Championing a Digital Generation. After a 
		round of Q&A to the four presenters as a new feature, an “ignite 
		presentation” which is a short and lively presentation was a memorable 
		final of each of the sessions.
		Ignite presentations
		These ignite presentations consisted of state-of-the-art examples and 
		best practice projects. On Monday 7 April Geoscience Australia, 
		represented by Lisa Bush, head of the national location information 
		branch talked about how she had worked on building Australia’s first 
		national geospatial information ecosystem with the Digital Atlas of 
		Australia. The Tuesday ignite presentation was held by CEO Geoff Smith, 
		Australian Spatial Analytics on Unlocking enormous potential: The 
		neurodiverse geospatial workforce revolution – ASA is a non-for profit 
		social enterprise revolutionising the geospatial sector by empowering 
		neurodivergent talent. The last ignite speaker was Kass Boladeras 
		representing Winyama, ensuring indigenous communities to have access to 
		the digital tools and opportunities they need to thrive; talking about 
		the power of indigenous mapping, through which project First Nations 
		people are harnessing cutting-edge geospatial technology to map their 
		land, tell their stories, and reclaim data sovereignty.
		
		
		Monday plenary session
		The first day at the plenary sessions Geography Championing a Digital 
		generation; creating value and collaboration in a geospatial ecosystem 
		was overall theme, with Mr Greg Scott, former UN-GGIM and now PVBLIC 
		Foundation, World Bank approach to Land Rights and Climate Goals by Mr 
		Stamatis Kotouzas, Innovating Global Geospatial Knowledge to Bridge the 
		Digital Divide by Dr Li Penge, head of the new United Nations Global 
		Geospatial Knowledge and Innovation Centre (UN-GGKIC) in China and the 
		ESRI approach to GIS and the Geospatial Ecosystem by Director of Land 
		Records/Cadastre Solutions Linda Foster.
		
		
		Tuesday plenary session
		The Tuesday plenary session had people in the centre in regard to 
		land relationships in a climate action context. First speaker was Dr 
		Chariss Griffith-Charles, Trinidad & Tobago on Resilience in human-land 
		relationships in the face of powerful resource, climate, and social 
		change which was followed up by four special sessions on the Small 
		Island Challenges (SIDS). Kenneth Norre, CEO of LE34 approached the 
		people aspect through the challenges in the Land and Geospatial 
		workforce. Viliami Folau, Tonga linked Land Climate and people in his 
		presentation, with further discussions in the SIDS sessions, and finally 
		Brett Leavy elaborated over how Virtual Songlines Digital Twin (VSDT) 
		details and documents the continuing First Nations perspectives and 
		presence within Australia’s major cities and regional towns.
		
		
		Wednesday plenary session
		On Wednesday, Allison Craddock Member of the Geodynamics and Space 
		Geodesy Group at the NASA Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, 
		addressed the overall topic of the sessions, Building foundational 
		competencies that support and benefit people; in land, marine and built 
		environments with a perspective from space on how to create a common 
		language that translates into meaningful knowledge using geodetic data 
		and information. Profession Matt King, Directo of the Australian Centre 
		for Excellence in Antarctic Science, Tasmania talked about Ice Sheets 
		and Future Shorelines stating that every centimetre of extra sea-level 
		brings approximately 1 million additional people globally into the zone 
		impacted by the sea and how satellite geodetic data are increasingly 
		able to define ice sheet changes and how these data, now of sufficient 
		duration and robustness, can quite reliably be used for projections over 
		the coming decades. CEO of Geoscience Australia Melissa Harris followed 
		up on the “connected world” and how Geoscience Australia is transforming 
		raw data into actionable insights. Finally Professor Anthony Yeh, the 
		University of Hong Kong, gave a highly interesting presentation on big 
		data and smart cities.
		
		
		The three plenary sessions were chaired by FIG Vice Presidents Winnie 
		Shiu, Qin Yan and Michalis Kalogiannakis.
		
		Technical sessions
		The technical programme was packed with technical session, high-level 
		and special sessions, sessions with partners such as UN-Habitat/GLTN, 
		World Bank and national organisations, various forums, meetings, 
		workshops and other elements with a broad variety of topics spanning 
		over the whole spectre of the profession. The sessions were organised by 
		the Chairs of FIG Commissions, Task Forces, Networks and Permanent 
		Institutions together with the local organisers and the Queensland 
		Government.
		A special SIDS (Small Island Development) consisting of four sessions 
		and two meetings were organised by FIG regional networks in cooperation 
		with several organisations. Three dedicated history sessions were 
		organised by the new Director of the Permanent FIG Institution of 
		History, John Brock, who, like in previous years, was so kind to support 
		the participation of Young Surveyors to the conference. We hope that his 
		example will be used by others, helping young surveyors to attend the 
		Working Week.
		
		9th Young Surveyors Conference and other pre-events
		The Young Surveyors Meeting should have been held at the Cube, an 
		inspiring location belonging to the university. In last minute the venue 
		was changed to another university location close by with a wonderful 
		view over the city. A packed programme organised by the FIG Young 
		Surveyors together with the Australian GCA Young and Emerging 
		Professionals. Under the theme "Next-Gen Geospatial Professionals: 
		Driving a Digitally Enabled Future", explored the power of emerging 
		technologies, innovative practices, and global collaboration to shape a 
		future that is digitally dynamic and sustainable. An impressive 
		programme was organised by chair of FIG Young Surveyors Shirley Chapunza 
		Tendai together with her creative and inspiring team. FIG Vice President 
		Michalis Kalogiannakis attended the opening, and gave his opening 
		remarks as FIG Council responsible for the Young Surveyors Nework.
		
		https://fig.net/fig2025/youngsurveyors.htm
		
		Thanks to the YS Sponsors:
		
		
		 
		
		
		Social events
		The Welcome Reception was held on Sunday evening on the north shore 
		in a garden area at 7th level between buildings and featured a cultural 
		element as well as a number of Australian animals such as a couple of 
		Koalas, a snake and a baby-crocodile which could be held by brave 
		participants.
		
		The Locate Dinner took place on Monday with a good number of 
		especially national participants. International attendees could attend, 
		too, to get a feel of the national event, and especially the many awards 
		that were presented during the evening.
		On Tuesday evening the ten FIG commissions invited interested to come 
		to a dinner location to network and meet fellow attendees. Again, 
		Brisbane was a perfect location with many restaurants at the South Bank 
		that could cater for the participants. Commission 5 had 5 previous 
		Commission chairs/vice chairs attending at the same time – Matt Higgins, 
		Australia (2003-2006), Rudolf Staiger, Germany (2007-2010), Mikael 
		Lilje, Sweden (2011-2014), Volker Schwieger, Germany (2015-2018) and Rob 
		Sarib who has served as vice chair for Matt, Rudolf and Mikael.
		
		
		The newly restored Townhall was the location for the Gala Dinner on 
		Wednesday night. The room was impressive, and 530 participants witnessed 
		a festive and fun evening. FIG President Diane Dumashie welcomed all, 
		and hereafter Markus Koper, Trimble, being a faithful sponsor to FIG 
		Foundation said a few words, too on behalf of Trimble.  The Gala 
		Dinner included the FIG Foundation, too, and a welcome from their side 
		presented the FIG Foundation grant recipients. The Japanese Company (and 
		Bronze sponsor) Ripro, funded a young surveyor from Ukraine to attend.
		The dinner was amazing in the beautiful townhall room and included 
		the conference song, also performed in the Opening Ceremony, written and 
		performed by Martin Belbic, entertainment by singing waiters during the 
		dinner, and after the dinner a wonderful band that made all participants 
		get up and dance merrily.
		
		Technical tours
		Several well attended technical tours were offered which included a 
		trip visiting Queensland Government Surveying, Spatial and Land 
		Administration, Technical walking tour showing the preparations for 
		Brisbane 2032 Olympics, a visit to the Geospatial Innovation and 
		Neurodiverse Workforce, and the Queensland Government Norfolk 
		Hydrographic Survey Vessel that cruised up and down Brisbane River. The 
		Lands Surveying and Mapping Museum was open during the conference days 
		for interested participants. Further, FIG Commission 3 had organised two 
		very popular consecutive sessions on Mobile Technologies for Inclusive 
		Sidewalk Mapping which included a walking tour in Brisbane.
		In regard to the tours Brisbane again showed what a perfect 
		conference city it is as most tours were in walking distance, and no 
		shuttles or other transportation was needed.
		A full day post-tour to the North Stradbroke Island on Friday 11 
		April attracted around 70 attendees, organised by Queensland Government 
		with Convenor Steve Jacoby in the lead. A bus and ferry transported all 
		to the Island where a visit to the local museum was organised which gave 
		the background for the function of the island. The island was during the 
		colony time used as quarantine before they were let into the mainland 
		and Brisbane. The museum gave a good overview of the indigenous 
		population and how they had lived before the colonisation. Hereafter the 
		trip took the participants to various sights which included a highly 
		interesting presentation by a representative of the indigenous people. 
		He was a lively and amazing story teller, informing about the habits, 
		life, and beliefs of the indigenous people in a very insightful way. 
		Thanks to Steve Jacoby and his team for organising this very special 
		tour.
		
		
		
		General Assembly and Closing Ceremony
		As part of the Working Week the FIG General Assembly was held. Please 
		see separate General Assembly Report
		In the Closing Ceremony, FIG President Diane Dumashie summed up the 
		activities during this productive and inspiring week. She thanked the 
		local organisers, with Stephen Jacoby in the lead and Peter James as 
		chair of the Local Organising Committee for their tireless work for the 
		preparations, as well as the GCA team with especially Tony Wheeler, Bec 
		Pascoe and Cate Bonthuys, for their dedicated work.
		At the end of the Closing Ceremony Tony Wheeler handed over the FIG flag 
		to Peter Newmarch representing the local organsing committee for FIG 
		Congress 2026 in Cape Town South Africa who invited all to South Africa 
		24-29 May 2026. The Closing Ceremony was followed by a farewell 
		reception – which was at the same time a welcome to Cape Town.
		
		
		
		More information:
		
		
		Thanks to the sponsors
		
		
		
		
		
		
		
		
		
		
		
		Pictures
		
		 
		Louise Friis-Hansen
		June 2025