Visit the Dow Corning web site

Lecture to examine attitudes to climate change

An Institution of Engineering and Technology product story
Edited by the Engineeringtalk editorial team Dec 12, 2005

Survey examining children's and parents' attitudes to climate change commissioned by the IEE as part of the 2006 Faraday Lecture "Emission Impossible: Can Technology Save the Planet?".

British children have given the thumbs down to nuclear power as an energy source for the future.

They are also more likely than their parents to shoulder the blame for climate change and are most concerned about changes to wildlife, a new survey has revealed.

The survey, examining children's and parents' attitudes to climate change, was commissioned by the IEE as part of the 2006 Faraday Lecture "Emission Impossible: Can Technology Save the Planet?".

The lecture shows students how technology is helping us tackle climate change and make better use of the earth's resources.

The lecture is a free, interactive show hosted by four young engineers who specialise in this area.

During the show, they will demonstrate the science behind the technology that is helping us save the planet using a dynamic mixture of live demonstrations, multimedia presentation and audience participation.

The IEE's Director of Qualifications Dorrie Giles sees this year's lecture as being particularly important: "We know that children are concerned about the environment and this lecture will equip them with the information they need to explore the opportunities available".

"The survey shows that only 19 per cent of children are aware that engineers can make a difference when in truth all environmental technologies have their basis in engineering".

In the survey, only eight per cent of kids cited nuclear energy as a way to slow down our changing climate compared with 43 per cent for solar energy, and 65 per cent are most concerned about the threat to our wildlife.

The lecture will run from January to March in Crawley, Bristol, Brighton, Cardiff, Harrogate, London, Belfast, Manchester, Glasgow, Birmingham, Singapore, Malaysia and Hong Kong as well as being broadcast via satellite to more than one million people worldwide.

Not what you're looking for? Search the site.

Back to top Back to top

Google Ads

 

Contact Institution of Engineering and Technology

Related Stories

Contact Institution of Engineering and Technology

 

Newsletter sign up

Request your free weekly copy of the Engineeringtalk email newsletter ...

Visit the Dow Corning web site

Articles by product category

All suppliers A - Z

A Pro-talk Publication

A Pro-talk publication