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Tribute to Nigel in Environmental Pollution journal, by Professor Awadhesh N. Jha, School of Biological and Marine Sciences, University of Plymouth: https://www.sciencedirect.com/journal/environmental-pollution/about/news/tribute-to-professor-jnb-bell-1943-2025
The passing of our colleague and friend Professor Nigel Bell is a huge loss. One of my fondest memories is when I joined Nigel during his Pollution Option week-long field trip in Wales in 2010. Not having enough room in the minibus for everybody, I drove my little old Polo all the way with Nigel as co-pilot. Nigel was never short of stories, about everything and everybody. Nigel also loved to tell us about each member of his beloved family. We worked hard every day but a good meal, and a proper drink in the evening were never a miss for Nigel! A most entertaining and interesting co-pilot and convenor one could have ever wished for. His dedication to the Environmental Technology MSc course continued till very late in his life. He will be missed but his influence will last for ever. Nigel will be remembered fondly by many people, all over the world. Thank you Nigel.
In 2010, we had the pleasure of seeing Nigel awarded the Rector’s Medal for Outstanding Contribution to Teaching Excellence. Below is some text from his nomination. "Nigel Bell is Professor of Environmental Pollution in the Centre for Environmental Policy (CEP) and Director of Alumni and Careers for the MSc in Environmental Technology. He is also currently covering as the Convenor of the Pollution Option of the MSc (Maternity cover) and an active supervisor of numerous MSc theses. Professor Nigel Bell was the Director of the MSc in Environmental Technology until 2008 and for a consecutive 30 years, when he retired from this role to focus on Alumni and Careers. Nigel is truly an extraordinary teacher, and this nomination aims to celebrate his career if not his life as the Director of the MSc for more than 30 years. Nigel’s outstanding commitment and contribution will hopefully also being considered for a Rector's Medal for Outstanding Contribution to Teaching Excellence. Nigel’s teaching excellence has gone above theoretical, strategic, and technological advancements in the field of environmental education where he provided an exceptional service, to an engagement with the student body that aimed to facilitate the learning process and significantly enhance the student experience. His ability to transform low performing students into high achievers, his commitment to quality of the learning process and the student engagement in the design and delivery of the course are only a few of the attributes that have inspired numerous courses in the UK and around the world where he is, was or has been an external examiner or an assessor, or an advisor or a collaborator. Nigel has always been committed to the education of all students. Aware that many come from a variety of backgrounds, and different cultures he has a unique ability to respect and appreciate uniqueness in others. With a similar unique ability to envision the future of a student, Nigel deeply cares for the success of all his students. His excellence in Relationship Bridging has enabled him to build strong relationships with students, graduates and employers. For more than 2,600 alumni the experience of studying at Imperial is deeply associated with Nigel as a teacher, mentor, careers advisor and a tutor. For most of us ‘Nigel is the Course’, is what brings identity to a very large and powerful alumni network, priceless experience to the process and inspiration to all of us to deliver the excellence of the course without compromising but further enhancing student experience."
At the age of 42 my midlife crisis found me wondering what to do. A chance remark from a friend led me to Nigel Bell, who over a 20 minute breakfast correctly diagnosed my unfulfilled need to study and contemplate how we, the people, are connected to the world we live in. I enrolled in and conpleted the MSc course he had led the creation of, and it changed me, very much for the better. Very much. Thank you Nigel !
Photo: Malham Tarn Field Trip, Yorkshire, July 1982 (with Dr. Alan Morten & Jeremy)
I was fortunate to have many classes with Professor Bell when I was studying Biology as an undergraduate at Imperial College, 1980-83. I fully credit Nigel for providing me with critical analytical skills and inspiring my life-long interest and career in the environment. I was also lucky to have Nigel as the supervisor for my third-year thesis on Interactions of ozone and acid rain: effects on plants, undertaken at Silwood Park. Nigel was the main driver of my return to Imperial College in 1990 to undertake an MSc. in Environmental Technology, specializing in pollution studies. I later moved to the U.S., but we stayed in touch over the years, exchanging news in Christmas cards. Nigel was special! One of a kind! His capacity to connect with students and maintain connections with them overtime was second to none. He was literally a walking encyclopedia of ICET students! And he was never afraid to speak truth to power and often did! His pioneering work on acid rain, for example, was defunded by the UK government because of their vested interest in not having the then state-owned power plants blamed. None of that deterred him. Thank you, Nigel. You made a very positive impact on this world and the students who passed through Imperial. You will always be fondly remembered. RIP.
Professor Nigel Bell at University of Plymouth during a PhD Viva Examination. 2018
Prof Nigel bell in Plymouth during an International Symposium ion Environmental Radioactivity (2012); First Row, right side in Blue shirt!
Prof Nigel Bell in Plymouth during International Symposium on Environmental Radioactivity.2012
Prof Nigel Bell in Slavutych, outside the Chernobyl exclusion zone, 2000.
Met Nigel at my first day at Imperial, when he welcomed us all at the Centre for Environmental Technology during the Inaugural lecture as the Director of the 90/91 Master’s Degree. I could not believe my eyes when, during the class weekend away at Silwood Park after a busy day, in the evening at the pub we found him drafting beer to all of us, knowing each one of us by name as if he had known us all for centuries. All my teachers have shaped my course one way or another, but Nigel had a particular trait that moved many of us to the realms of possibilities and incredible success - he believed in each one of us as a being a remarkable, unique, special and talented human being. Whenever I needed help, he would be there, whenever I needed a listening ear, he would listen and understand, and whenever I did not know which door to open, Nigel would offer me the key to the right one. I could write pages and pages as a tribute to Nigel – but it is actually best if I simply say a deep heartfelt …Thank you.
My memories of Nigel span the whole 40 years of my involvement in the Centre, from being a student of the 1983/84 cohort to him being instrumental (along with Richard Macrory and John Beddington) in my employment in 1995 as a Lecturer in Environmental Assessment. Nigel epitomised the synergy of excellence in research and in teaching that underpinned the Centre and the MSc in Environmental Technology from the very start - the coming together of academics across Imperial with a shared interest in environmental research and a passion for teaching. I had the pleasure of working alongside Nigel for many years as Deputy Director of the MSc and as Director of the Core Course, and through the growth of the course from 30 students to over 150 as new Options were added. I then had the challenge of taking over from him on his retirement as Director of Careers/Departmental Careers Advisor. No one could ever match Nigel's knowledge of alumni, recalling all by name, year and specialist option across 30 years or more! Not that it was without effort - he studied the cohort photos diligently until a face matched the name, and he could evidence that knowledge over Policy Seminar drinks by referring to each student he talked to by name. He always made time for students. His love of teaching extended beyond the MSc to his extensive external examining that he did over many years for undergraduate and postgraduate courses in so many institutions, not to mention the many PhDs he examined. It was this that contributed so much to his depth and breadth of knowledge around teaching and learning that he was able to bring to the development of the MSc course over the years. That passion for teaching for some of us was quite infectious. Policy seminar drinks, incidentally, became an institution that continues to this day - an opportunity to network informally with external experts, always a weekly event that Nigel could be guaranteed to attend and one that so many alumni recall with fondness. It was where friendships were forged and contacts made. His lasting legacy is the thousands of students he supported and advised and continued to maintain contact with right across the world. Those of us that owe so much to Nigel will cherish those many vivid memories of times past. There could only ever be one Nigel! Bill Sheate, Emeritus Reader, CEP: Therapist at Imagination Therapy.
Nigel Bell’s energy and enthusiasm played a critical role in developing Imperial’s MSc in Environmental Technology to become the global leader it is today. It is all too easy to forget just how innovative the idea was back in 1977. Despite the backing of the then Rector, Lord Flowers, many powerful heads of traditional departments within Imperial (whom Brian Flowers often described as the ‘Barons of South Kensington’) were strongly opposed – ‘a pap course for pap people’ as one put it. At the time most Masters’ courses added further specialisation to one’s first degree. The Imperial Course turned this model on its head - – a specialist undergraduate degree followed by a broadening of approach, including exposure to other disciplines such as economics and law, all critical inputs to contemporary environmental decision and policy making. It was in this context, that I contributed to the early beginnings, first as a visiting lecturer and then hired full time as the sole lawyer on Imperial’s staff. Even my own appointment showed just how imaginative Imperial could be at the time. I didn’t have a traditional academic background but was a barrister who had worked as Friends of the Earth’s in-house lawyer on cutting edge environmental issues. Working with Nigel over the next ten years was a delight. Never pompous and always positive. His deep caring for the students on the Course was immensely important to its success. And his legacy is now the extraordinary network of former graduates across the world, who all know they experienced something very special during their time at Imperial. Richard Macrory, Hon KC Emeritus Professor in Environmental Law, UCL
There he was, at the top of my Acknowledgements in my PhD thesis in 2000. So long, Nigel, you were the best mentor anyone could hope for.
Awadhesh Jha
Awadhesh Jha
I remember- when we were in Chernobyl- the representative from Department of Trade and Industry (DTI) – who had appointed Nigel as their envoy - mentioned that we could have appointed some other colleague for this role- but we decided to approach Nigel because of his ‘down-to-earth’ personality ! In his company we never feel that we are with someone with such a high status! In our frenetic drive to “publish or perish”, I feel that the human connections that used to be a large part of the process of scientific culture is being gradually eroded. Nigel’s memories will serve as a reminder that science is a human endeavour that is made richer and more rewarding by remembering the people we work with along the way. Remembering Nigel will show the right path in our and subsequent generations’ lives.
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