|
From the President
February 2006:
Networking by Design
(2/14/06)
Active participation listening,
learning, sharing and acting is essential to the future of
ASME. This year the ASME Leadership Training Conference (LTC) in
Houston will focus on the programs and operation of the Knowledge
and Community and Institute Sectors of ASME. Representatives from
these sectors will meet for the first time under ASMEs new
structure for this important collaborative planning session. As
part of a bigger team, members will work to shape our future, mindful
of the constraints of time, resources and budget. LTC 2006 will
provide ASME unit leaders and key committee members an opportunity
to share best practices and form partnerships with other units so
they can focus on critical issues important to the success of the
Society.
 |
|
Richard E. (Gene)
Feigel
|
Funding of new activities will be a high priority. The Strategic
Priorities Grant Fund (SPGF), recently approved by the Board of
Governors, is a new resource for funding priority initiatives. These
grants encourage broad and cross-functional projects, encouraging
collaborative programs from units throughout the Society. For FY06,
ASME priorities are young engineers, globalization, government,
industry, and new revenue-producing programs. These areas reflect
recognition of the general landscape in which ASME must operate
to be an effective professional society. We need to find ways to
open doors in these areas, to start discussions, to create activities
in other words, to respond.
Throughout this fiscal year ASME is launching new programs. An
example is ASME Solutions, which focuses on developing integrated
programs and services targeting specific industry clusters. ASME
Solutions initial focus areas are pressure technology, energy,
bio-pharmaceutical, water management, homeland security, and computer
hardware and software.
Scanning the horizon is critical to ASMEs future relevance
to our members and other stakeholders. We cannot respond to and
shape a future that we dont clearly understand. ASMEs
new Strategic Management Sector has begun a concerted process of
environmental scanning to identify strategic issues affecting our
profession and society. Our work in creating new programs must be
informed by these marks of the future. The Houston conference is
a milestone, but our learning and sharing must be continual. Realistically,
not everyone can attend events such as the LTC. I urge everyone
to avail herself or himself of ASMEs new tools for collaboration
such as the online Communities of Practice, where we can all share
experiences and information and participate in planning our future.
Have you visited ASME.org recently enough to navigate through its
newly designed web pages? In addition to the new design, a new search
engine of the site is being introduced, a result of considerable
efforts by ASME staff to improve the ease and time it takes to retrieve
the information you want. ASME offers a wealth of information to
members and web visitors, and bringing it to the desktop effectively
has been the challenge. Your comments on the redesign are welcomed,
and discussions through the ASME Web Community of Practice are encouraged.
ASME continues to focus on how critical innovation is shaping the
health and vitality of any nations technology infrastructure.
Encouraging innovation is key to staying competitive. In January,
ASME supported the introduction of an act in the US Congress called
Protecting Americas Competitive Edge (PACE). The impetus for
this bill was in large measure from a report from the National Academy
of Sciences, Rising Above the Gathering Storm: Energizing
and Employing America for a Brighter Economic Future (and
this report can be read online at www.nap.edu/catalog/11463.html).
This month, as we celebrate Engineers Week (February 19-25), we
need to broadcast an exciting, positive message of engineerings
contributions to meeting todays pressing global challenges.
I hope you have planned activities in your area, including reaching
out to encourage students to make a difference in the world as engineers.
One by one, our lives are our examples.
Gene Feigel
ASME President 20052006
go to the
ASME News Online Columns page
Turbo Expo, to be held in Spain this May, will
feature four keynote presenters
The 2006 ASME Turbo Expo, which will
be held this May, will include a keynote session featuring four
presenters.
Turbo Expo 2006, the premier technical conference on gas turbine
technology, will take place from May 811 at the Barcelona
International Convention Center in Barcelona, Spain. The meeting
is organized and managed by ASME's International Gas Turbine Institute.
Paul Adams, vice president of engineering at Pratt & Whitney;
Colin Smith, director of engineering and technology at Rolls-Royce
plc; and Alan Wilds, director of product development at Siemens
Industrial Turbomachinery Ltd., will speak on The Global Market
and Cooperative Ventures during the keynote session to be
held May 8.
Josep Maria Rañé i Blasco of the Catalonian Ministry
of Industry will open the keynote session at 3:00 p.m. The session
will conclude at 5:30 p.m.
ASME Turbo Expo Power for Land, Sea and Air will include
a papers program and equipment exhibit covering engine design, materials,
operations and maintenance, noise reduction in turbines, alternative
fuels, combustion diagnostics, and micro-turbines, among other topics.
The annual technical conference brings together engineers, research
scientists, educators and other professionals involved in the design,
operation, and maintenance of gas turbines.
Deadline is March 21 for 2006 Solid Waste Facility
Recognition Awards entries
ASME's Solid Waste Processing Division
is accepting nominations for the 2006 Facility Recognition Awards.
All nominations must be submitted by March 21.
Established in 1994, the Facility Recognition Awards acknowledge
contributions to the field of solid waste processing. Awards are
presented annually.
The award categories are Combustion (large and small plants), Material
Recovery, and Research Facility or Project. Award selections will
be based on the following criteria: success in achieving facility
goals, innovative and technical contributions to solid waste processing,
economics and safety, environmental performance, and the facilitys
role in integrated waste management.
Winners will be announced at the North American Waste-to-Energy
Conference (NAWTEC), May 1-3, 2006, in Tampa, Fla. For more information
or for nomination forms, contact Nat Egosi, chair of the Solid Waste
Processing Division Awards Committee, at (631) 756-1060.
|