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What is Environmental Engineering? Environmental engineers are the technical professionals who identify and design solutions for environmental problems. Environmental engineers provide safe drinking water, treat and properly dispose of wastes, maintain air quality, control water pollution, and remediate sites contaminated due to spills or improper disposal of hazardous substances. They monitor the quality of the air, water, and land. And, they develop new and improved means to protect the environment.
Where do environmental engineers work? Environmental engineers work in many places. Some of the common ones are:
What do environmental engineers know? Like most engineers, environmental engineers must have a strong background in mathematics, physics, and chemistry. They learn engineering problem-solving and how to work in teams to accom-plish goals. They develop the ability to apply scientific principles as part of making engineering decisions. Environmental engineers are skilled at analysis and design, and they apply their knowledge to pro-tect the environment and human health. The breadth and multidisciplinary n ature of environmental issues requires that environmental engineers expand their skills beyond the range normally associated with any single engineering field. Depending upon their specific career goals, environmental engineers gain knowledge and skills in areas such as chemical technology, geology, water and atmospheric chemistry, microbiology, toxicology, hydrology, soil science, computers, economics, and law. How do you become and environmental engineer?
Graduate education, leading to a Master of Science or to a Doctor of Philosophy degree, is an important part of environmental engineering. At many universities, graduate programs are open to students who do not have a Bachelors degree in environmental engineering, as well as to those students who study environmental engineering as undergraduates. This openness to students with a wide range of backgrounds is a hallmark of environmental engineering and continually brings fresh ideas to the environmental engineering field.
This information is reproduced from a brochure provided by the Association of Environmental Engineering Professors (AEEP). For more information on the AEEP, you can visit their WEB page at http://www.aeep.org.
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