Monday, December 12, 2011

How will mechanical engineering be affected by stricter environmental legislation?

How will mechanical engineering be affected by stricter environmental legislation?|||I agree with above ,have good points.





The Adaption and application of new materials (like varations of A2O3) and production methods (including automation/,mectronics) are not only inevitable they are Necessary to compete with other engineers in the world.





The concept of Moore's law does not only apply to computers.


All technology has a rate at which there total value/cost = (economic ,enviorment,social, usability,Quality,,etc...)


changes most of the time for the better. At a exponential rate!


see Rule of 70


http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rule_of_72





Monetary profit/cost is not only way production of service or product is valued to the world ,community or individual.





Simply ;Progress ,Adapt or Die.


paraphrase of, (lead,follow or get out of the way)|||Adversely is the simple answer :(


Oils, coolants, emissions and materials would probably be restricted among other things. The alternatives are limited so using the rules of supply and demand the demand for limited replacements would increase causing an overall cost increase. This would mean engineered items would be cheaper from countries without the legislation.


This all leads to unregulated countries getting all the profits and good engineers from those countries with the regulations.|||It will provide new challenges and more work for all engineers including mechanical engineers. The exact work will vary from industry to industry.|||Waste management.|||It won't be affected that badly. You need some such drastic thing for newer development to come about. Otherwise the stereotyped designs and machineries would continue. Any such legislation would only improve the products. We must all accept that we can not live without those products and systems directly or indirectly necessary for our day to day living. Therefore fresh ideas will be injected into mechanical engineering products also. So nothing to worry

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