Pivotal Moment: Forging Ontario’s Engineering Future
Building on the knowledge from our last benchmarking report, OSPE engaged the engineering community to learn more about how engineers feel about their roles, their future and their opportunities. In some cases, there has been progress and in others the status quo. Either way, knowing where we stand is the best way to move forward. Learn more by checking out our latest report.
															Gain insights on:
Systemic Barriers: Why international engineering graduates and women continue to face disproportionate challenges to success.
Brain Drain: The real cost of expensive education and stagnant wages.
Evolving Relevance: What engineers say they need to thrive and why it’s more than just a P.Eng. licence.
Regulatory Lag: How regulations are falling behind a rapidly evolving industry.
															Engineering in Ontario, by the numbers
Women in Engineering
59% of female respondents said there is a lack of gender representation in engineering. An improvement of 12%.
International Outlook
Future of the P.Eng.
In OSPE’s words
															Message from the Chair: David Carnegie, P.Eng.
Ontario Society of Professional Engineers
As Chair of OSPE’s Board of Directors, I see progress in our profession’s culture, yet barriers to advancement, fair pay and equitable opportunities persist.
Many engineering graduates are not working in engineering fields, and regulatory frameworks are not keeping pace with emerging technologies or the evolving needs of engineering practice.
Guided by OSPE’s strategic pillars Unite, Lead, Care and Prosper, we are committed to collective action. This report serves as both a catalyst and blueprint for government, industry, academia and the engineering community to collaborate on meaningful change.
Together, we can create a thriving professional community that attracts, develops, and retains diverse talent to address the world’s most pressing needs and large-scale challenges.