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July 2022

Engineers fall under MBIE microscope

27 Jun 2022, Industry Updates, News

A new registration and licensing regime has been announced for professional engineers

Cabinet has agreed to the Ministry of Business, Innovation and Employment’s (MBIE) proposal to develop a bill to introduce a two-tiered regulatory system for engineers and establish a new regulator to provide oversight. 

While engineers are not currently required to be registered, many choose to do so by becoming Chartered Professional Engineers. Under the proposed legislation, all engineers will need to be registered and those in higher-risk disciplines will need to be licensed to practise. 

To gain registration, all engineers will need to hold a minimum qualification, be subject to a code of ethics and meet continuing professional development requirements.

To be licensed for higher-risk work, engineers will need to meet stricter competency criteria and reapply for their licence to be renewed periodically.

Hold engineers to account

While a large number of engineers are highly professional, there are too many that are practising with no checks on their professionalism or competence and there are few means to hold them to account if their standards slip,” said Amy Moorhead, Manager Building Policy at MBIE.

“Improving the regulation of engineers will minimise the potential for things to go wrong, protect New Zealanders from the risk of unexpected remediation costs, and give the public greater confidence that professional engineers are all acting within their areas of competence.”

Moorhead said the new regulation has been proposed following lessons learned from failures in New Zealand and overseas, particularly issues brought to light by the Canterbury earthquakes.

“The new regulatory regime for engineers will help minimise the possibility of further failures happening from new engineering work,” she said.

An Engineers Registration Board will be established to be supported by a Registrar, Complaints Officer and Disciplinary Committee. MBIE will fulfil the Registrar and Complaints Officer role initially.

The decision was made following public consultation. MBIE received 250 submissions, mostly from engineers, and 81% agreed engineers should be subject to regulation.

Change welcomed

Engineering New Zealand (ENZ) President Rosalind Archer welcomed the announcement, adding that “the profession has been calling for strengthened regulation for many years.”

ENZ is New Zealand’s professional body for engineers, with around 20,000 members. It represents and regulates its members and acts as the Registration Authority for Chartered Professional Engineers.


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