2026 Data Summit
Join the Data Foundation's 2026 Data Summit in DC to collaborate with experts and build better environmental data infrastructure!
Morning Session - Symposium on Public Data as Strategic Infrastructure
The Data Foundation Symposium on Public Data as Strategic Infrastructure will feature interactive demonstrations and formal presentations from Data Foundation Senior Fellows and other invited guest speakers. Public data collected and managed by government agencies informs decisions, markets, and forecasts, while providing the basis for insights that underlie the mechanics of daily life in the United States. Symposium presenters will demonstrate the value of public data as strategic infrastructure across sectors. Topics covered in the morning’s symposium will include the use of these data sources for training artificial intelligence applications, responding to emerging public health threats, and enabling technological solutions to detect and prevent fraud.
Government data has long been an accessible and trusted source of information for researchers, industries, journalists, policymakers, and the public. The future modernization of our data and evidence infrastructure, powered by artificial intelligence and guided by budget constraints, will require thoughtful conversations about how to improve the data we collect and maximize the impact of our data investments across American society. As needs, resources, and tools to leverage data evolve, symposium presenters will invite our audience to consider:
- What is the better future we are working towards, and why?
- What are the data needs?
- Who needs the data?
- How are they getting that data?
Public data is strategic infrastructure. How do we ensure decision-makers, researchers, and the public have the information they need for today’s questions and the future’s needs?
Join the Data Foundation for a full-day event, featuring a morning symposium and afternoon event that will feature dynamic tools, frank discussion, and collaborative efforts that push us to answering our four core questions. The morning’s focus on data as strategic infrastructure will precede afternoon programming focused specifically on the value of better data for guiding organizations’ investment decisions and managing exposure to climate and environmental risks.
Join the Data Foundation's 2026 Data Summit in DC to collaborate with experts and build better environmental data infrastructure!
Morning Session - Symposium on Public Data as Strategic Infrastructure
The Data Foundation Symposium on Public Data as Strategic Infrastructure will feature interactive demonstrations and formal presentations from Data Foundation Senior Fellows and other invited guest speakers. Public data collected and managed by government agencies informs decisions, markets, and forecasts, while providing the basis for insights that underlie the mechanics of daily life in the United States. Symposium presenters will demonstrate the value of public data as strategic infrastructure across sectors. Topics covered in the morning’s symposium will include the use of these data sources for training artificial intelligence applications, responding to emerging public health threats, and enabling technological solutions to detect and prevent fraud.
Government data has long been an accessible and trusted source of information for researchers, industries, journalists, policymakers, and the public. The future modernization of our data and evidence infrastructure, powered by artificial intelligence and guided by budget constraints, will require thoughtful conversations about how to improve the data we collect and maximize the impact of our data investments across American society. As needs, resources, and tools to leverage data evolve, symposium presenters will invite our audience to consider:
- What is the better future we are working towards, and why?
- What are the data needs?
- Who needs the data?
- How are they getting that data?
Public data is strategic infrastructure. How do we ensure decision-makers, researchers, and the public have the information they need for today’s questions and the future’s needs?
Join the Data Foundation for a full-day event, featuring a morning symposium and afternoon event that will feature dynamic tools, frank discussion, and collaborative efforts that push us to answering our four core questions. The morning’s focus on data as strategic infrastructure will precede afternoon programming focused specifically on the value of better data for guiding organizations’ investment decisions and managing exposure to climate and environmental risks.
Afternoon Session - 2026 RegTech Data Summit: Managing Environmental Risk Through Better Data
As local communities, investors, insurers, industries, and states integrate climate, environmental, and natural disaster data into their operations and risk assessments, they face a fundamental data challenge: the information they rely on is often incomplete, inconsistent, or incompatible across sources and for differing uses. The Data Foundation’s RegTech Data Summit 2026: Managing Environmental Risk Through Better Data, hosted in Washington, D.C. on June 4, will address the questions, what is the better future we are working towards, and why; what are the data needs; who needs the data; and how are they getting that data?
Poor data quality, conflicting definitions, and fragmented systems create significant risk exposure and result in not only operational inefficiency but genuine uncertainty about whether organizations truly understand their climate-related exposures.
And yet, there are signs of collaborative and innovative efforts leading to solutions.
- The International Sustainability Standards Board (ISSB) and the Taskforce on Nature-related Financial Disclosures efforts to support data quality as a strategic public good.
- Improving firefighting effectiveness by integrating multiple data sources like historical fire perimeters, 911 calls, mountaintop cameras, lightning detection, and satellite imagery
- The Regional Greenhouse Gas Initiative (RGGI), which is a cooperative, market-based effort among states in the northeastern United States
- And, the platforms and technologies developed to analyze the federated regulatory requirements for investment and risk disclosure
Good to know
Highlights
- 8 hours
- In person
Refund Policy
Location
Convene Hamilton Square
600 14th Street Northwest
Washington, DC 20005
How do you want to get there?
