Of the Field

CMWR 2026

T

he Conference on Computational Methods in Water Resources (CMWR) is dedicated to nurturing and promoting cutting-edge interdisciplinary research on quantitative forecasting of hydrological processes. The event places a special emphasis on mathematical, computational, statistical, and machine learning methods, and has been held biennially since 1976 alternat…

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55Voices
2Underwriters
0Exhibitors
17On the bill · sessions
46Companies · in total
§I

The Voices

Programmed at CMWR, in alphabetical order.
Adam Szymkiewicz
Gdańsk University of Technology
Adriana Paluszny
Imperial College London
Ahmed ElSheikh
Heriot-Watt University
Alberto Bellin
University of Trento
Alberto Carrassi
University of Bologna
Aldo Fiori
University of Rome 3
Alessandra Marzadri
University of Trento
Alexandre Tartakovsky
University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign
Andrea Franceschini
University of Padova
Anneli Guthke
University of Stuttgart
Basil Kraft
ETH
Ben Livneh
UC Boulder
Bo Guo
University of Arizona
Branko Bijeljic
Imperial College
Chrisitan Massari
CNR
Cyprien Soulaine
CNRS
Daniel M. Tartakovsky
Stanford University
Davide Picchi
University of Brescia
Delphine Roubinet
Geosciences Montpellier CNRS
Dipankar Dwivedi
Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory
Elena Volpi
University of Rome 3
Felipe de Barros
University of Southern California

— and 33 more, by name unsung —

§II

Underwritten By

The houses behind the program. Tiers as disclosed.
ALMA CLIMATE-IT
CINECA
§III

The Programme

Selected from 17 sessions on the bill.
  • TBA

    Advances in computational modeling of vadose zone processes

    The vadose zone, located at the heart of the critical zone, extending from the water table to the land surface, has a strong control on various processes such as aquifer recharge, …

  • TBA

    Advances in integrating surface and subsurface hydrological modeling

    The stress of water resources globally has and will increase due to continuously growing demands and changing driving forcing. Central to addressing this challenge and proposing su…

  • TBA

    Advances in reduced-order modeling, data assimilation, and digital twins

    The rapid expansion of monitoring networks delivering high-resolution real-time measurements has generated widespread interest in data assimilation and, more generally, the interpl…

  • TBA

    Advances in remote-sensing tools and data driven methods for understanding hydrological processes

    Remote-sensing tools and data-driven methods are rapidly advancing our ability to observe, quantify, and understand hydrological processes across scales. These advances, including …

  • TBA

    Computational ecohydrology

    The study of ecohydrology concerns the interactions between the hydrological cycle and ecological systems, involving different biotic and abiotic components of the terrestrial bios…

  • TBA

    Computational methods for human–water system modeling and decision making

    Sustainable management of water resources increasingly depends on our ability to represent and predict the complex interactions between human and natural systems. Advances in compu…

  • TBA

    Computational methods for sea-ice modelling and predictions: data assimilation, machine learning and physics

    Understanding and predicting sea-ice variability remain central challenges in climate science, with profound implications for polar ecosystems, global weather patterns, and human a…

  • TBA

    Computational modeling of hydrodynamics and morphodynamics processes in coastal and river systems and mass flows

    Geophysical flows occur over a wide range of temporal and spatial scales across coastal and riverine environments as well as the land surface. Wind-induced waves, tidal forcing, an…

  • TBA

    Computational modeling of subsurface processes for climate mitigation and energy transition

    Human-driven climate change presents one of the defining challenges of our time, demanding both substantial reductions in greenhouse gas emissions and the development of sustainabl…

Intermission
Part the Second · For the Buyer

An audience of 46 companies, parsed from the program.

46 companies in attendance.

The numbers below are derived from the speakers, sponsors, and exhibitors on this page — cross-referenced into one ledger. They are the only thing here that 10times.com cannot tell you.

01Fig. 01 — Composition of the House
0All threespeak · spons · exh
2Sponsoringsponsor only
0Exhibitingexhibitor only
44Companies Speakingspeaker only
02Fig. 02 — The Voices, by Seniority
  • Other roles55100%

Of 55 on the bill · classified by free-text title

03Fig. 03 — The Heaviest in the Room
  1. 01ALMA CLIMATE-ITSp
  2. 02CINECASp
  3. 03University of Bologna3V
  4. 04University of Padova3V
  5. 05Stanford University2V
  6. 06TU Delft2V
  7. 07University of Bergen2V
  8. 08University of Rome 32V
  9. 09University of Southern California2V
  10. 10University of Stuttgart2V
  11. 11University of Trento2V
  12. 12Arizona State University1V
  13. 13CERFACS1V
  14. 14CNR1V
04Fig. 04 — By Tier
unspecified2
100% of 2