Host institutions

ACU Blue Charter Fellowships can be hosted by any ACU member institution, or in industry, in any Commonwealth country outside the applicant's country of residence.

Please see below for a list of potential host institutions. Note that applicants may apply to be hosted at any other ACU member institution.

If you are an ACU member institution who would like to host a Blue Charter Fellow in future, please email [email protected].

Brunel University London, UK

Research areas: sustainable design, waste to energy, design for behaviour change, sociology, communications and social change, waste management engineering, materials innovation (particularly biopolymers)

Contact: Professor Geoff Rodgers

Cape Peninsula University of Technology, South Africa

Research areas: Profesoor Opeolu’s research focuses on method development, monitoring, remediation (using biomaterials and nano-materials) and performing ecological health risk assessments of endocrine disrupting chemicals (EDCs) in environmental matrices (water, soil and food).

She has investigated many heavy metals, phenolic compounds, polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs), perflourinated compounds (PFOS and PFOAs) and pharmaceuticals in environmental matrices as well as their toxicities in ecological systems. She launched a Beat plastic pollution campaign in June 2018 and has just started a study on microplastics occurrence in water and wastewater systems. She is interested in qualitative and quantitative analyses of plastics in different media (biotic and abiotic) as well as ecological and human health implications of plastic pollution

Contact: Professor Beatrice Olutoyin Opeolu

Cardiff University, Wales, UK

Research areas: alternative plastics and freshwater ecosystem health, ecosystem function, ecosystem services, ecotoxicology.

Contact: Professor Isabelle Durance

Research areas: environmental psychology, sustainable behaviours and lifestyles, behaviour change, perceptions of plastics in the environment.

Contact: Professor Wouter Poortinga

Council for Scientific and Industrial Research (CSIR), South Africa

Research area: integrated waste management

Contact: Dr Linda Godfrey

Research area: End-of-life options of plastic waste and designing biodegradable bioplastics

Contact: Dr Sudhakar Muniyasamy

Covenant University, Nigeria

Research areas: Timescale monitoring and mapping of microplastics in the marine environment; Identification, characterisation and quantification of microplastics in water, intertidal and core sediments, and biota of tropical coastal ocean.

In addition, we promote approaches to reduce inputs of plastics into the marine environment through recycling, education and public awareness.

Contact: Professor Nsikak Benson

Dalhousie University, Canada

Research areas: policy strategies to reduce use or distribution of single-use plastics, impacts of plastics on wildlife, outreach, education and awareness that targets change in human behaviour around plastics

Contact: Dr Tony Walker

Durham University, UK

Research areas: We are investigating the issue from a business point-of-view and trying to see if new business models, advance technology, and, educating the consumers can address the issues. So any issue looking at the problem to identify a business based solution will be of interest.  Some key projects that we have keen interest include

  • Measuring the size of waste economy
  • Designing new business models to convert waste into valuable products
  • Developing a waste to energy network
  • Designing a local circular economy for waste to value
  • Identifying the best waste disposal strategy
  • Developing a facility location model for efficient waste collection and processing
  • Real-time vehicle routing for efficient waste collection
  • IoT based waste collection models

Contact: Dr Manish Shukla

Exeter University, UK

Research areas: coastal and marine governance, ecotoxicology, circular economy, fisheries and aquaculture, marine vertebrate ecology, maritime humanities, ocean health and well-being, ocean systems, ocean technology.

Contact: Professor Brendan Godley

Jawaharlal Nehru University, New Delhi, India

Research areas: Environmental Sustainability; Waste Management; Waste to energy programme; E-Waste; Bio-degradable plastic waste; Indigenous Practices for sustainable development; Science, technology and Society Study, Higher Education.

Contact: Professor Madhav Govind

Keele University, UK

Research areas: materials studies and development studies, focused on plastics
Contact: Dr Deirdre McKay 

Research areas: sustainable resources science, focused on plastics 
Contact: Dr Sharon George

Lancaster University, UK

Research areas: Qualitative research on key cross-organizational and technical barriers/enablers within collective corporate efforts to end plastic waste in South East Asian marine environment; Sustainable Asset Valuation of new Waste Infrastructure in key South East Asian countries; Exploring cultural dimensions to consumer recycling attitudes and behaviours on plastic waste and recycling; Resolving social inequities within the informal and formal sectors of plastic waste infrastructure.

Contact: Desna Mackenzie, contact co-ordinator for Supervisors based at Lancaster University

Massey University, New Zealand

Research areas: International, regional and national plastic pollution governance, democratisation of science and policy, social licence to operate, STS, material culture, political ecologies of plastics, waste colonialism, precautionary approach, risk and uncertainty.  Also offered is the opportunity to work with the ‘Palmy Plastic Pollution Challenge’: a citizen science based, ‘living labs’ research project to measure plastic pollution in the Manawatu River. 

Massey University can offer a fellow the opportunity to support the sustainability strategy of an Indigenous New Zealand Fisheries company.  The successful fellow will help develop strategies to reduce plastics, seek plastics alternatives, minimise negative impacts of plastics usage, and to reclaim, recycle, and reuse lost and legacy plastics.

Contact: Dr Trisia Farrelly

Memorial University of Newfoundland, Canada

Research area: The preparation and study of new materials targeting an understanding of biodegradability under different conditions. Our materials are typically prepared used renewable feedstocks, and experiments range from catalytic synthesis, degradation studies and materials characterization including GPC, NMR and microscopy.

Contact: Dr Francesca Kerton 

Research area: feminist, community-based, and anti-colonial science, monitoring plastics in food webs, mitigating fishing gear.

Contact: Dr Max Liboiron

Nanyang Technological University, Singapore

Research areas: The role of microorganisms in the bioremediation of plastics, both biodegradable and non-biodegradable. The efficacy of waste water treatment in the capture and isolation of plastics.

Contacts: Dr Jamie Hinks and Dr Stephen Summers

National University of Singapore

Research areas: Microplastic particles and their characterisation, Bioimpact of micro- and nanoplastics on marine environments, monitoring the toxicity of synthetic fluorescent microplastic and nanoplastic particles using marine animal models, developing new polymers, nanomaterial synthesis and characterisation.

Contact: Professor Suresh Valiyaveettil

Nature’s Valley Trust, South Africa

Research areas: We use long term ecological field research programs to tackle locally relevant conservation issues in our region. Based on sound science, we design conservation intervention programs that aim to reduce identified impacts, and to raise awareness through strategic conservation education programs that engage communities involved. In terms of plastics research, we aim to reduce single use plastics on our beaches, and in so doing reduce the direct impact on local wildlife.

In terms of research, we conduct baseline monitoring on marine debris deposited on several beaches in our region, which we correlate with beach user data. We also measure direct impact on biodiversity through target specific research on fish and birds, in terms of entanglement, ingestion and plastic use in nests. Based on this we run socio-ecological programs aimed at reducing the amount of waste to landfill from our region, by engaging the public and businesses to improve waste management.
Contact: Dr Mark Brown

Plymouth Marine Laboratory, UK

Research areas: Plymouth Marine Laboratory’s research into microplastics focuses on their fate in the marine environment and impact on marine organisms. Our latest laboratory and field studies suggest that interactions with marine life could play an important role in the fate and impacts of microplastics.

Current research involves investigating the bioavailability of microplastics to zooplankton and the ability of mussels to remove microplastics from flowing water. We take an interdisciplinary approach, applying expertise in ecotoxicology, molecular, microbial, social sciences, remote sensing and modelling. PML has recently undergone a £5.4 million refurbishment, including a brand new ultraclean microplastic laboratory with dedicated microscopy and FTIR spectroscopy, in addition to constant temperature rooms and mesocosm facility.

Contacts: Dr Pennie Lindeque & Dr Matt Cole

SRM Institute of Science and Technology, India

Dr. Paromita Chakraborty’s major research interest lies in environmental occurrences, source identification, fate and behaviour of emerging organic contaminants of concern and developing cost-effective remediation techniques. With industry partner Dr.Chakraborty is also recycling waste plastic to produce new products. Dr.Chakraborty joined SRMIST in 2012 and designed, developed and leading the Environmental Science and Technology research group. Her research group works on the following areas:

  1. Multi-media movement of legacy and emerging organic pollutants viz., pesticides, industrial chemicals and plasticizers in the informal electronic waste recycling workshops and open burning sites of Indian cities
  2. Atmospheric transport of persistent organic pollutants and plasticizers
  3. Quantification and ecological impact assessment of plasticizers in riverine and marine environment of India
  4. Cost-effective remediation techniques for emerging organic contaminants
  5. Fabricating new commercial products from recycled and waste plastic

Contact: Dr Paromita Chakraborty

Sustainable Seas Trust, South Africa

Research areas: The Sustainable Seas Trust (SST) and its project the African Marine Waste Network (AMWN) have a goal of Zero Plastics to the Seas of Africa. Reliable, measurable data on macro-, meso- and microplastics for Africa is urgently needed, as Africa is data poor in this regard.  

SST’s research programmes are focused on developing the techniques to be implemented across Africa for collecting reliable and measurable macro-, meso- and microplastics data, stopping waste flow to the sea and monitoring progress towards zero plastics. These include the use of remote sensing over land-based sources, plotting waste flow channels on land, and providing measurements for rivers, estuaries and coasts; river (and estuary) bank, beach and marine environment sampling techniques and clean-ups; data management and analysis with a view to develop monitoring strategies and predictive models. In addition to the measurements of the amount of plastic and microplastics in different parts of the environment, the build-up of pollutants from microplastics in marine organisms is also being conducted under SST’s research mandate.

Contact: Stephanie Martin, Head of the African Waste Academy

Swansea University, Wales, UK

Research area: solar driven mitigation of plastic waste

Contact: Dr Moritz Kuehnel

University of Birmingham, UK

Research areas:

  1. Environmental microplastic monitoring of freshwater, estuarine and marine environments using techniques such as epi-fluorescent microscopy and confocal Raman microscopy. 
  2. Developing and testing novel techniques for microplastic and nanoplastic quantification (i.e. TGA-FTIR-GCMS and TOF-SIMS). 
  3. Investigating the fate and flux of microplastics in artificial streams and their uptake in freshwater food-webs.

Contact: Dr Holly Nel

University of Brighton, UK

Research areas: We have world-leading expertise in the following research areas within our vibrant Centre for Aquatic Environments: The impacts of microplastics, nanoparticles and other contaminants on marine organisms.  Movement of microplastics between river sediment and the marine environment.  Plastics in coastal wetland environments.  Ecosystem services, values and marine environments.  Tourism, pollution and marine environments.  We welcome applications to join our dedicated and passionate team.

Contact: Professor Chris Joyce

University of Cape Town, South Africa

Research areas: At the University of Cape Town, research on plastics in the marine environment dates back to the early 1980s, when Peter Ryan was studying the ingestion of plastics by seabirds. In 1984 he and Coleen Moloney teamed up to start a long-term monitoring programme quantifying both meso- and macroplastics on South African beaches. This survey has been repeated at five-year intervals, with the next survey planned for June 2020.

Over the years, the research group expanded its interests to include additional aspects of plastic pollution, such as distributions of plastics at sea, daily deposition rates of plastics on beaches, the relationship between beach users and marine plastic pollution, sinking rates of plastics, ingestion of plastics by a variety of marine organisms, etc. We would be delighted to host a fellow who is interested in carrying out fieldwork quantifying long-term trends in the supply, removal and accumulation of plastic litter on beaches.
Contacts: Professor Peter G. Ryan & Associate Professor Coleen Moloney

University of Dar es Salaam, Tanzania

Research areas: microplastics

Contact: Dr Daniel Shilla 

University of Dhaka, Bangladesh

Research Areas: Organic Chemistry, Natural Products Chemistry, Analytical Chemistry, Chemical Contaminants in Food and Environmental, Plastic Pollution, Microplastic, Water Quality Measurement in Marine Environment.

Contact: Professor Mohammad Shoeb

University of Ghana

Research areas: education around plastics: public and governmental, monitoring the extent of the problem of water and sediment contamination by plastics, routes from plastics in the environment to local populations.

Contact: Professor Chris Gordon

University of Gibraltar

Research areas: Intertidal and shallow-water benthic ecology; Multi-scale spatio-temporal distribution patterns of organisms, with special reference to the marine sphere; Climate change, particularly human–marine interactions since earliest times with special emphasis on the role of contingency, history, geography and ecology; The dynamics and design of nature reserves Across-sea dispersals in human evolution.

Contact: Dr Darren Fa

Research areas: Climate change; Invasive non-native species, aquatic organisms’ ecology and physiology, ecosystem changes, ecosystem health, ocean acidification and warming, coastal environmental pollution, biodiversity impacts, environmental monitoring programmes, climate change impacts, conservation in Marine Protected Areas.

Contact: Dr Awantha Dissanayake

University of Johannesburg, South Africa

Research areas: Laser based Additive Manufacturing, Friction Stir Welding and Processing, Metal Matrix Composites, Characterizations and Mechanical testing of Metallic and Non-metallic Materials

Contact: Professor Esther Titilayo Akinlabi

University of KwaZulu-Natal, Durban, South Africa

Research areas: Biotechnology; Maritime studies (Marine science, Coastal engineering, Climate change, Renewable energy, Natural hazards, Erosion/sediment yield, Remote sensing modelling); Water, environment and biodiversity; Energy and technology; Agriculture and food security; HIV/AIDS, tuberculosis and health improvement; Social development and economic studies and Indigenous knowledge system.
Contact: Professor Shahidul Islam

University of Manchester, UK

Research areas: sustainable plastics, biodegradable polymer synthesis
Contact: Professor Michael Shaver

University of Melbourne, Australia

Research areas: Green chemistry, nanotechnology, polymer science, energy production, water treatment and agricultural waste applications.

  1. Pyrolysis of waste biomass for biochar production – applications in desalination of water and flow batteries.
  2. Isolation of nanocelluloses from crop-waste – chemistry of modification and fabrication into composite materials.
  3. 3D printing of piezoelectric polymers for enhanced electric output for flexible energy harvesting devices.

Contact: Professor Amanda Ellis

University of Newcastle, Australia

Research areas: weathering influenced, ecological and human health risk assessment of micro and nanoplastics; Advanced Remediation technologies for Microplastics; Benchmarking biodegradable plastics (bioplastics)

Contact: Dr Thava Palanisami

University of Plymouth, UK

Research areas: environmental psychology, attitudes, perceptions, behaviour change, public engagement, science in society

Contact: Dr Sabine Pahl

Research areas: the effects of plastic debris, including microplastics, in the marine environment

Contact: Professor Richard Thompson 

University of Southampton, UK

Research areas: The Southampton Marine Plastics group forms a focus for the University of Southampton’s environmental plastics research and incorporates staff with interests in the effects of plastics on marine life, risks associated with seafood, plastics in waste water treatment systems and land-based environments, and microplastic behaviour in aquatic and sedimentary systems.

In marine areas specifically, our research focusses on the role of estuarine, coastal and shelf sediments as microplastic 'sinks' or stores, microplastics accumulation and behaviour in the sea surface microlayer, land to ocean transfer of plastics and estuarine trapping processes, plastics dispersion and ocean transport, plastic interactions with marine organisms, and plastics as 'vectors' for organic contaminants.

Contact: Professor Andy Cundy

University of the South Pacific

Research areas: The Marine Pollution and Toxicology Group, School of Marine Studies, is monitoring the presence, and distribution, of Microplastics in Fijian aquatic ecosystems. Our goal is to establish baseline data for the presence of microplastics in surface water, sediments and biota in the coastal environment. Associated biological effects related to exposure to microplastics are evaluated in several relevant species.

We are also investigating the effects that macroplastics and microplastics have on the health of Mangrove forests. Chemical pollutants such as metals, oil, and nutrients and its related biological effects in sentinel organisms is also a research area.

Contact: Associate Professor Marta Ferreira

University of the Sunshine Coast, Australia

Research area: the lethal and sub-lethal impacts of marine debris on sea turtles and sea birds.
Contact: Dr Kathy Townsend

University of Wolverhampton, UK

Research areas: Built Environment Sustainability including sustainable design and use of materials; Construction Management including all aspects of construction processes and project delivery, and Construction Health and Safety including policy, management and technology of processes.

To this end recent projects have included (but have not been limited to): Sustainable Housing; Health and Safety in Construction; Rainwater Harvesting; Risk Management in Fast track Projects; Lean Construction; Alteration and Refurbishment of Buildings; Renewable Energy in Buildings; Sustainable Water, Sanitation and Hygiene Delivery; Sustainable use of Recycled Paper and Waste Plastics in concrete amongst others.

Contact: Dr David Oloke

Universiti Malaya

Research areas: Dr Goh has two main research interests, i.e., in tourism and in urban studies. For the former, she focuses on tourism governance, tourism planning and impacts management especially in protected areas. For the latter, on natural resource and environmental issues and governance, sustainable development of cities, urbanization and the related risks.

Contact: Dr Hong Ching Goh

Universiti Putra Malaysia

Research areas: As a specialist in Geographic Information Systems (GIS), Professor Rashid helps the expansion of GIS into Agriculture, Healthcare, and Environment that depends on GIS. Thus, his work is of significant benefit to society, with his recent work with Blue Charter being in the use of GIS for mapping plastic waste.

Contact: Professor Dr Abdul Rashid Mohamed Shariff

Universiti Malaya

Research areas: Dr Goh has two main research interests, i.e., in tourism and in urban studies. For the former, she focuses on tourism governance, tourism planning and impacts management especially in protected areas. For the latter, on natural resource and environmental issues and governance, sustainable development of cities, urbanization and the related risks.

Contact: Dr Hong Ching Goh