Career Advice Columnists

About The Hong Kong Institution of Engineers

The Engineering Society of Hong Kong was founded in 1947 with the aim of bringing together engineers of different Disciplines for their common good. The Society flourished and as a result the Hong Kong Institution of Engineers (the HKIE), was incorporated under the Hong Kong Institution of Engineers Ordinance, Chapter 1105 of the Laws of Hong Kong in 1975. Adapting to the needs of engineers in Hong Kong, the Institution continues to develop and expand.

The Institution sets standards for the training and admission of engineers. It has strict rules governing the conduct of its members and, as a learned society, it enables its members to keep abreast of the latest developments in engineering. Many of the learned society activities take place at the Institution’s Headquarters in Causeway Bay. It provides a venue for seminars, talks and meetings as well as the office of the Secretariat.

An important development in 1982 was the Hong Kong Government’s decision to recognise Corporate Members of the HKIE for civil service. Most engineering companies in Hong Kong recognise Corporate Membership of the HKIE as the key qualification for employment of professional engineers.

On the participation of the engineering profession in public affairs, we have one seat representing the Engineering Functional Constituency in the Legislative Council, and among the 1,200-member Election Committee (EC) formed in 2011 for the election of the Chief Executive of the HKSAR, there were 30 EC members from the Engineering Subsector. These representatives are elected by the Corporate Members of the Institution. In addition, Corporate Members and Graduate Members of Information Technology Division of the Institution are eligible to vote for the representatives in the Information Technology Functional Constituency in the Legislative Council and its Election Committee Subsector. Views of the engineering profession are well respected both by the HKSAR Government and the community through these establishments.

The HKIE has established close relationship with engineering institutions throughout the world and it has signed agreements for reciprocal recognition of professional qualifications with engineering authorities in Australia, Canada, Ireland, the Mainland, New Zealand and the United Kingdom. It has also signed agreements of co-operation with other organisations in Europe, the Mainland, North America and Southeast Asia.

In June 1995, the HKIE joined the Washington Accord as one of the signatories. The engineering degrees accredited by the HKIE are recognised by other signatories including Australia, Canada, Chinese Taipei, India, Ireland, Japan, Korea, Malaysia, New Zealand, Russia, Singapore, South Africa, Sri Lanka, Turkey, the United Kingdom and the United States. In 1999, Hong Kong became a founding member of the APEC Engineer Framework. Registered Professional Engineers (R.P.E.) in Hong Kong are eligible to register as Hong Kong APEC Engineers.

In June 2001, the Institution became a founding signatory to the Sydney Accord. Under this Accord, higher diplomas and associate degrees accredited by the HKIE are recognised by other signatories including Australia, Canada, Chinese Taipei, Ireland, Korea, New Zealand, South Africa, the United Kingdom and the United States. On multilateral recognition of engineers’ and technologists’ qualifications, the Institution is a founding member of the Engineers Mobility Forum and the Engineering Technologists Mobility Forum, which were superseded by the International Professional Engineers Agreement (IPEA) and the International Engineering Technologist Agreement (IETA) respectively in 2013. The former is to provide a framework for the recognition of experienced professional engineers by responsible bodies in each of the signatory economy, while the latter is a framework that facilitates multilateral recognition of technologists’ qualifications.

Both the APEC Engineer Register in Hong Kong and the IPEA International Professional Engineers Register in Hong Kong were launched in April 2002. The IETA International Engineering Technologists Register in Hong Kong was also launched in February 2008.

In June 2009, the Institution was admitted as a full signatory to the Seoul Accord. The computer science degrees accredited by the HKIE are recognised by other signatories including Australia, Canada, Chinese Taipei, Japan, Korea, the United Kingdom and the United States.

The HKIE is an affiliate member of World Federation of Engineering Organisations (WFEO) and a member of Federation of Engineering Institutions of Asia and the Pacific (FEIAP).