Margaret McNamee

Margaret McNamee
Born (1965-09-19) September 19, 1965
Australia
CitizenshipAustralia; Sweden
Alma materUniversity of Sydney (BSc); Chalmers University of Technology (Lic); University of Gothenburg (PhD)
Known forResearch on the environmental impact of fires and sustainable fire-resilient construction
AwardsSjölin Award (2023); Dougal Drysdale Award (2023); Arthur B. Guise Medal (2024)
Scientific career
FieldsFire-safety engineering, combustion chemistry, sustainability
InstitutionsLund University; RISE Research Institutes of Sweden; SP Technical Research Institute of Sweden
Thesis Some Experimental and Theoretical Aspects of Combustion Chemistry  (1995)
Doctoral advisorSture Nordholm

Margaret Mary Simonson McNamee (born 19 September 1965) is an Australian-Swedish fire-safety engineer. She is Professor of Fire Safety Engineering and, since 2024, Deputy Dean of the Faculty of Engineering (LTH) at Lund University in Sweden.[1] Her research addresses smoke toxicity, fire-generated pollutants and the integration of sustainability into fire-safety practice.[2][3]

Early life and education

McNamee was born in Australia in 1965.[4] She earned a Bachelor of Science in general science from the University of Sydney in 1986, a licentiate in physical chemistry from Chalmers University of Technology in 1991 and a PhD in physical chemistry from the University of Gothenburg in 1995 with the thesis Some Experimental and Theoretical Aspects of Combustion Chemistry.[5]

Career

After completing her doctorate, McNamee joined the Swedish National Testing and Research Institute (later the SP Technical Research Institute of Sweden) as a researcher in 1995. She held numerous leadership roles in the Department of Fire Research and, in 2014, was appointed Chief Technology Officer first for SP and later for RISE Research Institutes of Sweden when SP merged with several other institutes across Sweden in 2016.[6]

McNamee founded McNamee Consulting in 2018 and that same year joined Lund University as Professor of Fire Safety Engineering. She became Deputy Dean of the Faculty of Engineering in 2024.[1]

Research

McNamee’s work focuses on quantifying the environmental consequences of unwanted fires, assessing smoke toxicity and developing life-cycle-based methods for sustainable, fire-resilient design.[2] She has also contributed to international agendas for wildfire risk reduction and to cost–benefit analyses of flame-retardant use in buildings.

Awards and honours

  • Sjölin Award (2023) – International FORUM of Fire Research Directors, for outstanding achievements in fire-safety science.[7]
  • Dougal Drysdale Award (2023) – International Association for Fire Safety Science, recognising extraordinary service to the organisation.[8]
  • Arthur B. Guise Medal (2024) – Society of Fire Protection Engineers, its highest research honour.[9]

Selected works

  • Zhu, N.; Tang, F.; Peng, X.; Sun, X.; Hu, L.; **McNamee, M. S.** (2025). “Experimental study on thermal runaway evolution and toxicity hazard of lithium-ion batteries in a tunnel under longitudinal air flow.” Journal of Energy Storage 114: 115651. doi:10.1016/j.est.2025.115651
  • McNamee, M. S. et al. (2019). “IAFSS Agenda 2030 for a Fire Safe World.” Fire Safety Journal 110: 102889. doi:10.1016/j.firesaf.2019.102889
  • Simonson McNamee, M.; Andersson, P. (2014). “Application of a cost–benefit analysis model to the use of flame retardants.” Fire Technology 51: 67–83. doi:10.1007/s10694-014-0402-9

References

  1. ^ a b "Margaret McNamee". Lund University. Retrieved 11 July 2025.
  2. ^ a b "Margaret S. McNamee". Lund University Research Portal. Retrieved 11 July 2025.
  3. ^ "mmcnamee". www.naturalhazards.com.au. Retrieved 2025-07-10.
  4. ^ "Curriculum Vitae – Margaret M. S. McNamee" (Curriculum vitae). Lund University. 2025.
  5. ^ Some Experimental and Theoretical Aspects of Combustion Chemistry. Chalmers University of Technology. 1995. ISBN 978-91-7197-128-9. Retrieved 11 July 2025.
  6. ^ "Margaret Simonson McNamee". LinkedIn. Retrieved 11 July 2025.
  7. ^ "Sjölin Award". International FORUM of Fire Research Directors. Retrieved 11 July 2025.
  8. ^ "Dougal Drysdale Award for Extraordinary Service to the IAFSS". IAFSS. Retrieved 11 July 2025.
  9. ^ "Arthur B. Guise Medal – 2024 recipient Margaret McNamee". SFPE Foundation. Retrieved 11 July 2025.