Categories: News & Events

Open Letter from Renishaw CEO Warns of UK Skills Gap

Listen to this article

The skills gap in UK engineering has taught us a valuable lesson: there is no such thing as quick fix. British engineering will only progress through sustained collaborative efforts, consistency and a cultural shift.

As the Perkins Review highlighted last year, parents, teachers, employers and the Government should collaborate to encourage young people from any background to regard engineering as a fulfilling and exciting career.

However, collaboration is nothing without consistency. Genuine passion is cultivated in our early years. A child who regards science class as a chore is unlikely to become an accomplished engineer. Children should be encouraged and motivated to see how science can help them understand and change the world and the message should be reinforced constantly during school years.

Furthermore, what our industry needs is a cultural shift to help shatter outmoded stereotypes. Engineering does not equal manual labour; it is a world of thrilling and rewarding career opportunities. Engineering is not only for men; it welcomes people from both genders, all ethnic backgrounds and any walk of life. Engineering is anything but dull; it’s one of the most imaginative and creative professions in the world.

Lucy Ackland, who has won the Women’s Engineering Society Prize at the IET’s Young Woman Engineer of the Year Awards, had to work hard to persuade her teachers that she wanted to leave school at 16 to become an apprentice at Renishaw.  She went on to achieve a first class honours engineering degree and has led a project team developing our next generation of metal 3D printing machine.

As a leading UK engineering company, in theory Renishaw should have been among the first whose recruitment suffered as a result of the skills gap. However the number of our apprentice and graduate applications has trebled in the last few years, as a direct result of our collaborations with schools, universities, STEM-based organisations, career advisors and Government agencies.

There is no hasty remedy for the UK’s shortage of engineers. The only solution is a continuous, combined effort to make the profession more appealing to young people, their parents and teachers. It won’t take one year, five or ten. It is a perennial commitment that we make to future generations.

Phil Black - PII Editor

I'm the Editor here at Process Industry Informer, where I have worked for the past 17 years. Please feel free to join in with the conversation, or register for our weekly E-newsletter and bi-monthly magazine here: https://www.processindustryinformer.com/magazine-registration. I look forward to hearing from you!

Recent Posts

Driving Change: How Hyper-Efficient Motors Are Reshaping Industries

Beamex is your trusted partner for calibration excellence, providing accurate measurements, reliable data, and traceability…

15 hours ago

Why Chemical Firms Are Reducing Toxic Substances

Chemical giants are shedding light on why cutting down on toxic substances is now a…

2 days ago

How AI Is Transforming the Factory Floor

Andrew Sherlock, Director of Data-Driven Manufacturing, National Manufacturing Institute Scotland (NMIS) Artificial intelligence (AI) is…

2 days ago

IChemE Launches Inquiry into UK Chemical Engineering Research

The Institution of Chemical Engineers (IChemE) has announced a significant presidential inquiry into the current…

3 days ago

UK REACH ATRm Progress Met With Caution by Chemical Industry

A Multidisciplinary Approach This research combined numerical analysis with hands-on experimentation. By employing high-speed photography…

3 days ago

Research Finds Cast Iron Water Pipes Can Temporarily Reseal

Recent research has uncovered some exciting news about cast iron pipes—they can actually 'reseal' themselves,…

3 days ago