European Young Engineers

The European Young Engineers (EYE)  is a European non-profit organisation,[1] listed in the register of Engineering associations of the World Federation of Engineering Associations.[2] The aim is to encourage young engineering professionals and students sharing knowledge, fostering mobility and developing personal and professional skills.

European Young Engineers MTÜ
Founded1994
TypeNonprofit Organization
FocusEngineering
Location
  • Estonia
Area served
Europe
Websitehttp://www.eyengineers.eu/

History

In the mid 1990s, Europe’s views and feelings were growing together faster and faster; the expansion towards Eastern Europe and the Baltic was approaching. For the engineering profession, this posed many challenges: changes in engineering education; the resulting higher mobility in Europe; mutual recognition of diplomas and professional experiences.

Confronted with increasing international co-operation in their professional engineering projects, young engineers saw the need to be better prepared for the European market. National engineering associations could and still can only partly provide the answer to those questions and give support to their members, especially their students and young engineers.

Consequently, young members of the European engineers’ organisations created a pan-European platform and founded the European Young Engineers (EYE) in 1994. During the following years several engineering associations in Europe were invited to join and EYE rapidly grew.

EYE became a dynamic and rapidly growing organisation with enthusiastic members, rapidly consisting of more than 23 associations and representing more than 250.000 young engineers in Europe. EYE started to offer its member organisations and their students and young engineers the access to a Europe-wide network by linking the engineering associations.

Twice a year, EYE offers a member-hosted conference, each one bringing together between 80 and 300 participants from all over Europe. Between these events, the community stays in contact via their website.

In 2007 the European Young Engineers signed a Memorandum of Cooperation with FEANI.[3]

Objectives

  • Bringing together young engineers from all over Europe
  • Fostering the mobility of young engineers
  • Representation of Member Associations
  • Enabling young engineers to share knowledge and experience

Statutes

The latest statutes of the European Young Engineers have been voted on by the Council in 2016.

List of member organisations

Country Name of organization Acronym
Belgium i.e.-net ingenieursvereniging vzw IE-NET
Bosnia-Herzegowina Studentski elektrotehnički klub i servis Sarajevu

(Student Association of Electrotechnics of the University of Sarajevo)

STELEKS
Bulgaria ФЕДЕРАЦИЯ НА НАУЧНО-ТЕХНИЧЕСКИТЕ

СЪЮЗИ В БЪЛГАРИЯ (Federation of the Scientific Engineering Unions in Bulgaria)

FNTS
Croatia European Young Engineers Croatia EYE-HR
Czech Republic European Young Engineers Czech Republic EYE-CZ
Denmark Ingeniørforeningen i Danmark[4]

(Danish Society of Engineers)

IDA
Finland Insinööriliitto

(Union of Professional Engineers in Finland)

IL
France Bureau National des Eleves Ingenieurs

(National Bureau of Engineering)

BNEI
France Association Francaise des Femmes Ingenieurs

(French Association of Female Engineers)

FI
Germany Verein Deutscher Ingenieure [5] VDI
Ireland Engineers Ireland EI
Luxembourg Association Nationale des Etudiants Ingenieurs

Luxembourgeois (Union of Luxembourg Engineering Students)

ANEIL
Malta University Engineering Students Association UESA
Netherlands Koninklijk Instituut Van Ingenieurs

(Royal Institute of Engineers in the Netherlands)

KIVI
Norway Norges største organisasjon for ingeniører og

teknologer (Norwegian Society of Engineers and Technologists)

NITO
Portugal Ordem dos Engenheiros OE
Republic of Macedonia Engineering Institute of Macedonia EIM
Spain Consejo General de la Ingeniería Técnica Industrial de España COGITI
Sweden Sveriges Ingenjörer SI
United Kingdom Association for Consultancy and Engineering ACE
United Kingdom Young Railway Professionals[6] YRP
United Kingdom European Young Engineers United Kingdom [7] EYE-UK

Conferences

EYE has successfully organised conferences in the following locations:

# Date Location Theme Further information
1 June 1995 Amsterdam, Netherlands  
2 November 1995 Antwerp, Belgium  
3 June 1996 Rotterdam, Netherlands  
4 October 1996 Dublin, Ireland  
5 Jun 1997 Copenhagen, Denmark  
6 November 1997 Karlsruhe, Germany  
7 June 1998 London, UK  
8 November 1998 Budapest, Hungary  
9 June 1999 Brussels, Belgium  
10 November 1999 Utrecht, Netherlands  
11 June 2000 Hanover, Germany  
12 November 2000 Helsinki, Finland  
13 May 2001 Copenhagen, Denmark  
14 November 2001 Paris, France  
15 May 2002 Bruges, Belgium  
16 November 2002 The Hague, Netherlands  
17 June 2003 Helsinki, Finland  
18 November 2003 Cologne, Germany “International Management – New International Challenges”
19 June 2004 London, UK “Managing People for Business”
20 November 2004 Strasbourg, France “International Management - New International Challenges”
21 June 2005 Cardiff, UK “Entrepreneurship”
22 November 2005 Leuven, Belgium “Surface of Innovating Life”
23 May 2006 Sofia, Bulgaria “European Union and Challenges for the Young Engineers”
24 October 2006 Salerno, Italy  
25 June 2007 Enschede, Netherlands “People”
26 October 2007 Valletta, Malta “Networking Europe through Engineering”
27 May 2008 Copenhagen, Denmark “Exploring Environmental Sustainability”
28 October 2008 Düsseldorf, Germany “Do it with a European Engineer”
29 May 2009 Hasselt, “Energy of the Future”
30 June 2010 Glasgow, UK “Innovating to meet our Global Challenges”
31 November 2010 Salerno, Italy “Standarisation in a Global World”
32 June 2011 Varna, Bulgaria “Engineering the Future”
33 September 2011 Geneva, Switzerland Joint conference with World Engineers Congress (WEC) “Facing the Global Energy Challenge”
34 June 2012 Rotterdam, Netherlands  
35 October 2012 Valletta, Malta “Overcoming Limitations”
36 June 2013 Dublin, Ireland “Engineering Connections”
37 September 2013 Antwerp, Belgium “Move. Transport. Transcend.”
38 May 2014 Sarajevo, Bosnia-Herzegovina “Common Purpose: Together, Stronger, into the Future!”
39 October 2015 Lisbon, Portugal "Collaborative Engineering - The European Way" [8]
40 May 2016 Hannover, Germany "Digital Transformation"
41 June 2017 Bristol, UK "Ideas are international" [9]
42 May 2018 Sofia, Bulgaria "Sustainable Engineering"
43 October 2018 Valletta, Malta "Emerging Technology" [10]
44 May 2019 Eindhoven, Netherlands "Shaping Future Society"
gollark: You may be bored of trolley problems now, so consider this alternate ethical scenario.
gollark: What if the trolley isn't actually rail-based, but a GTech™ hovercraft which just obeys switches and rails ironically?
gollark: What of these alternative solutions? Consider them.
gollark: Well, some people are bad at expected value, see, so this is an important test.
gollark: What about this?

References

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