University of Southampton: Southampton Professors elected Fellows of the Royal Academy of Engineering
Professor Susan Gourvenec, Professor of Offshore Geotechnical Engineering and Deputy Director of the Southampton Marine and Maritime Institute at the University of Southampton, has been elected as a Fellow of the Royal Academy of Engineering.
Susan is internationally recognised as an expert in offshore geotechnical engineering across academia and industry. Her major engineering achievements include offshore foundation design methods which are now part of international standards that govern industry practice globally.
Susan is a passionate educator and champion for equality, diversity and inclusion in engineering and a practitioner of multi-disciplinary research, working across life sciences, social sciences, arts and humanities.
She joins over 70 new experts who have made exceptional contributions in their sector and reflect the Academy’s Fellowship Fit for the Future initiative to promote outstanding engineers from underrepresented groups.
Professor Gourvenec is the Royal Academy of Engineering Chair in Emerging Technologies – Intelligent and Resilient Ocean Engineering, and a contributor to Engineering X, an international collaboration that brings together some of the world’s leading problem-solvers to address the great challenges of our age.
Susan is an expert in offshore geotechnical engineering
“I am delighted by the honour of being elected as a Fellow of the Royal Academy of Engineering,” said Professor Gourvenec.
“The work of the Royal Academy of Engineering is incredibly diverse and I see this as an immense opportunity to use my experiences to inspire a new generation of future engineers, who may not have considered this direction.
“I am particularly looking forward to promoting the critical role of engineering, in partnership with other career disciplines and society, in achieving a sustainable and just future for all.”
Professor Honor Powrie, a senior director at GE Aviation who is a Visiting Professor in the Faculty of Engineering and Physical Sciences, has also become a Fellow.
Sir Jim McDonald FREng FRSE, President of the Royal Academy of Engineering, said:
“I am delighted to welcome such an array of enormously talented people to the Fellowship of the Royal Academy of Engineering.
“In an uncertain world, one thing is certain – engineering skills, vision and leadership will play a crucial part in addressing the escalating domestic and global challenges that we face today.”
The new Fellows will be formally admitted to the Academy at a special ceremony in London on 8 November.