• Question: What do you think is going to become the biggest challenge for engineers in the future?

    Asked by talha to Neil, Marcus, Kate, Claire, Alex on 18 Jun 2014.
    • Photo: Marcus Johns

      Marcus Johns answered on 18 Jun 2014:


      I think that the biggest challenge will be to not only produce the goods that we make now using fewer materials, or even different materials, and less energy but to actually produce more goods so that everyone in the world can have the same standard of living – i.e. eradicate poverty.

      The idea is also to make the negative impact of humanity on the planet as small as possible – so reduce the amount of greenhouse gases that we produce; reduce the amount of water that we use in industrial processes and farming so that more people can drink it, and minimise the damage that we are doing to the habitats of the other creatures that we share this planet with. This is known as being sustainable, enabling future generations to enjoy the planet as we do today.

    • Photo: Neil Dhir

      Neil Dhir answered on 18 Jun 2014:


      I think perhaps the education of engineers will become much more difficult in the future. We are in a weird place right now where we are just able to produce what one would call general engineers, someone who can just join a company and pick up the ropes when they get there.

      This will be harder in the future.

      As we have grasped many of the more fundamental basics of the world around us, things are now becoming more complex, and to tackle this we need more complex education to deal with the latter. This will have an impact on engineering education, where we no longer will be able to train general engineers. They will have to be specialised from day one, rather choosing their specialty later on in their degree, or indeed after their degree.

      Shoring up all the necessary expertise needed for future engineers will be hard. Companies will most likely have a lot of say. Think for example about energy engineers, in the future they are most likely to be fusion engineers or atomic engineers, to gain the focus and expertise they need to succeed in those fields. We have chemical engineers today, that serve primarily the oil and offshore sector, but in the future they may well have to be fracking engineers or deepsea engineers, in order to efficiently deal with those parts of the business.

      Hence, I reckon that while we are alright now in regards to training engineers, this will be harder in the future, especially as companies and governments are looking for cost savings, they will also be demanding more from their core value which often happens to be the technical staff i.e. the engineers and scientists.

    • Photo: Alex Lyness

      Alex Lyness answered on 18 Jun 2014:


      Hey talha,

      I think the biggest challenge facing engineers in the future is making sure there is enough of us coming through the ranks to solve all the problems the world faces!

      There has been a real downturn in students opting to pick STEM (Science, Technology, Engineering and Maths) based degrees/courses. There are plenty of problems that the world faces, such as; energy crisis, ageing populations and lack of fresh drinking water.

      There are hundreds of thousands of young bright people out there who could work to solve these problems. The issue is some of them might not ever realise the contributions they could make as engineers.

      I think it’s up to engineers to use the opportunities they are given to educate and inspire future generations of engineers who can develop their skills and help prevent problems not just stand by and watch when things go wrong.

      Let’s hope activities like this one (IAEGMOOH) lead to a few kids pick STEM subjects at school and we get a few more budding engineers in the pipeline!

    • Photo: Claire Brockett

      Claire Brockett answered on 19 Jun 2014:


      Hi talha,
      There are a number of challenges facing engineers in the future, and I’d agree with everything that’s already been said.
      There are a lot of large problems still to be solved, whether that is access to clean water, famine, provision of healthcare, environmental and energy issues, housing problems – and depending on where you are and who you are, you might consider one more important the other. As engineers we’ve all got the skills to contribute to these in some way…
      But as Neil and Alex have highlighted, perhaps the biggest issue facing engineers is making sure we have well trained engineers for the future to help with these problems. We need more students at school to go into science and engineering careers – hopefully by participating in things like this, students learn about more about what engineering involves and might discover it’s the career for them 🙂

Comments