ICorr at the Parliamentary & Scientific Committee House of Parliament, London

Mar 16, 2026 | Institute News

Earlier this month, ICorr was proudly represented by Dr Tony Rizk at the P&SC session on “How microbes are a crucially overlooked part of environmental and biodiversity legislation.” The event brought together scientists, engineers, academics, and policymakers to explore the vital role microbial systems play across industry.

Microbial communities underpin critical processes in energy, agriculture, water treatment, marine and freshwater ecosystems, and the pulp and paper sector. In oil and gas, certain groups are linked to MIC and reservoir souring, while others offer promising routes for bioremediation, selective anti-souring, and potentially MEOR.

A key takeaway: future legislation must better recognise, monitor, and integrate microbial ecosystems, acknowledging both the risks and the opportunities they present.

The session also called for more environmentally responsible industrial practices that work with microbial diversity, rather than disrupt it, to support long-term operational resilience and modern, science-based regulation.

ICorr remains committed to supporting evidence-driven policy and advancing sustainable, technically robust practices across the corrosion and materials sectors.

Dr. Tony Rizk (ICorr) and Mr. Roger Casale (Parliamentary and Scientific Committee) photographed at the Palace of Westminster.

 

Archives by Month

Follow us on social media

General Enquiries

Institute of Corrosion
Corrosion House
5 St Peters Gardens
Marefair
Northampton
NN1 1SX

tel: + 44 (0)1604 438222
e-mail: admin@icorr.org

Related News

H. G. Cole Award 2026

H. G. Cole Award 2026

The H. G. Cole Award 2026 recipient has been selected! Please join us in congratulating David Harvey for his selection as the recipient of the 2026 H. G. Cole award. The H. G. Cole award is ICorr’s most prestigious award for service to the Institute and is made on an...