Message from
Engineers Canada CEO: Dealing with Disaster
I offer my condolences to those
affected by the catastrophic earthquake that occurred in Haiti on
January 12. Thus far, the disaster has claimed over 170,000 lives, and
will leave a devastating affect both on the country and around the
globe.
I
hope that the country will be able to recover from the tragedy as
quickly as possible. Sadly, reconstruction will cost billions of dollars
and take years to accomplish. But it’s not just about dollars and cents.
It’s about the people in need, those who lost their lives - including
Canadians - and the friends and family mourning for those departed.
While Engineers Canada has made a donation to the Canadian Red Cross to
support the relief efforts, it’s the work being done on the ground in
Haiti that will be felt directly by those suffering from the
catastrophe.
This is where engineers come in. The engineering profession can provide
tangible support and expertise in response to natural disasters, and we
have the required skills to establish engineering projects that
facilitate national reconstruction. But is Canada’s engineering
profession doing enough? Are we, and will we be, ready when another
disaster strikes? How can we help as a profession?
I believe that, as engineers, we are in a position to affect concrete
positive change when disaster strikes. We are recognized for our
expertise in public infrastructure, and as a profession we have the
strength and unity to respond to catastrophic situations. As the
Engineers Without Borders campaign says:
Engineers Serve the World.
As such, members of Canada’s engineering profession are currently
contacting various relief organizations across the country to see how
they can provide support to the relief efforts. For instance, while
RedR Canada is limited in what it can do as an organization, it has
been working with larger organizations to identify engineering
volunteers for deployment to Haiti to provide relief and recovery
operations.
The profession is also studying issues surrounding natural disaster
risks and adaptation. While the earthquake in Haiti was not a result of
climate change, there is evidence - with an increasing occurrence of
extreme/intense weather patterns - that shows the world will be faced
with more climate change-related disasters in the future. Engineers
Canada has been looking into this issue through its involvement in, and
chairmanship of, the World Federation of Engineering Organizations’
Committee on Engineering and the Environment. The Committee enables the
World Federation and the global engineering profession to address the UN
Millennium Development Goals, and its mission statement includes
gathering information and providing recommendations on the adaptation of
physical infrastructure to climate change and natural disaster risks.
I
am proud of the efforts being made by the engineering profession to help
those suffering in Haiti. I see the need for us to look further into how
we can mobilize in response of future natural disasters, and my thoughts
are with everyone affected by the events in Haiti.