Professor Ashish Sharma
PhD - Civil Engineering (1996) Utah State University
MTech - Water Resources Engineering (1991) IIT Delhi
BEng - Civil Engineering (1989) IIT Roorkee
Professor of Hydrology and Water Resources in the School of Civil and Environmental Engineering
Ashish is a Professor of Civil and Environmental Engineering at the University of New South Wales, Sydney, Australia. He is an engineering hydrologist interested in problems involving hydrological uncertainty. Much of his research has focussed on the impact of climate change and variability on hydrological practice, along with applications related to remote sensing, formulating stochastic approaches, developing hydrological models, and the two big hydrology bread-and-butter problems - design flood estimation + water resources management.
Ashish has served as the President of the International Commission of Hydrologic Sciences (IAHS) Commission on Statistical Hydrology (STAHY) since 2016.
Ashish has served on the Australian Research Council's College of Experts twice.
Ashish served on the Technical Committee overseeing the development of the Australian Rainfall and Runoff Design Flood Estimation guidelines (ARR2016).
- Publications
- Media
- Grants
- Awards
- Research Activities
- Engagement
- Teaching and Supervision
See Australian Research Council grants at from most recent to older. Ashish is frequently awarded other (non-ARC) grants, many funded directly from Government and other agencies.
2019 - President's Prize, Institution of Engineer's Australia in relation to service on Technical Committee revising ARR2016
2011 - Australian Research Council Future Fellowship (level 3) on representing low-frequency variability in hydro-climatic simulations
See details of recent research projects and activities, along with graduated PhDs, on
My Research Supervision
See recent papers. Most of the first authors are either PhD students or postdoctoral fellows. See also many papers where the first author is an undergraduate or coursework masters student reporting the work in his/her honours thesis.
See also past graduated PhDs at