Mike Halloran said:
Controlling the global oversupply of engineers.
... for a start, by starting some of those 'shovel ready' projects. ... or finding them.
Planetary Protection. ... from what?
Politicians and Thieves? Sorry, redundant.
In the UK and in my company I always keep hearing about a shortage of Engineers and skills, are you saying the global market is saturated with engineers currently to the point where its one of the biggest challenges?
Also, when I mentioned planetary protection I was meaning things such like, astroid detection, global warming, nuclear disarment etc..
SomptingGuy said:
The English language is one. Engineering no longer means anything in it.
Hi, I'm from the UK obviously and I'm not really sure what you mean, I know we have different ways of spelling words than Americans do etc.. but can you expand on what you mean by this?
Or do you mean imperial style measurement as opposed to metric etc..?
MoltenMetal said:
I don't know anything about the situation in the UK, but here in Canada the #1 issue facing the profession of engineering is the disconnect between an engineering education and a career as an engineer. The fraction of engineering grads working as engineers, engineering managers or engineering inspectors has shrunk from 58% in 1996 to 31% in 2011. Despite this, we continue to have employers complaining of a "skills shortage" because they expect to find experienced employees who have been fully trained by others. The median level D engineer now earns approximately as much as the median schoolteacher in Ontario. It won't be long before we no longer have a profession if this keeps up.
This is very interesting, I guess you could say a similar thing about graduates in the UK, some leave university never to actually use the skills they have learnt and often a lot of topics are missed etc..
Would you say a solution would be to alter the course structures to provide a more general or more sopecific rwange of skills?
rb1957 said:
space elevator
fusion power
cheap clean water (for the billions that don't have it)
understanding how to work with off-shore resources (ie out-sourcing off-shore)
Some of those challenges sound quite far fetched, do you think a Space Elevator is something the UK can produce by itself or would this be the next large scale international space construction project?
Fusion power is another big challenge, I think I agree with you there, it ties nicely in with satisfying the countries/worlds energy demands, do you have any information on the current progress of this type of research?
Clean water for all is a BIG problem but I'm not sure this is a particular challenge for the UK in the next 25 years.
Can you expand on what you mean by understanding to work with off-shore resources?
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Thanks for your comments.