Course aim: Due to the overwhelming positive feedback to this
course Gerry Wheeler has agreed once again to travel from Canada to
deliver his best-practice wastewater treatment facilities optimisation
course. The course will provide a practical appreciation of the
capacity and capability of the existing physical infrastructure in
Ireland, and equip attendees with an awareness of how through a
combination of effective communication, process control, and management
policies, utilities can “un-lock” the latent capability of their
facilities. Who should attend: Wastewater managers, operations staff, maintenance staff, laboratory staff, staff involved in process engineering.
NEW Carbon Footprint Management and Renewable Technologies
Two-day Course Date: September 28, 2010 Day 1 and October 12, 2010 Day 2 Venue: Engineers Ireland, 22 Clyde Road, Dublin 4 Course aim: To equip the participants with the knowledge and
skills to measure the carbon footprint of an organisation and identify
cost savings, operational efficiencies and technologies to reduce that
footprint. It will focus on assisting them in implementing
cost-effective climate change strategies through operational
efficiencies and the introduction of renewable technologies. It will
also address national and international policies and regulation
associated with climate change such as emissions trading, carbon
labelling and green procurement. Who should attend: Consulting engineers, architect practices,
local authorities, manufacturing organisations, food cooperatives and
public servants. Participants should be engineers or professionals with
a similar technical background such as architects, environmental
officers and food scientists.
An electrical engineering systems eight-week evening course begins on
September 23.
Course aim: The Electro-Technical Council of Ireland (ETCI) publishes the National Rules for Electrical Installations ET101:2008 4th Edition. The fourth edition is now mandatory in respect of nearly all electrical installations in Ireland. The aim of this course is to enable delegates to contextualise the ETCI Rules, 4th Edition (ET101:2008) with integral aspects of electrical engineering ranging from an appreciation of health and safety legislative requirements to practically implementing engineering solutions underpinned by the scope and breadth of the ETCI rules.
Who should attend: Electrical engineers/electrical engineering managers; building services engineers/technicians; technical staff involved in electrical engineering disciplines; technical staff with responsibility for the management of electrical safety, in particular, those with responsibility for writing electrical safety statements. For more details go to: http://www.engineersireland.ie/cpd/cpd-training/
25 Aug Organisational Skills and Time Management - Clyde Road