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Environmental engineers utilize engineering concepts to create solutions for pollution control and public health preservation. They rehabilitate air, soil, and water conditions at polluted locations and engineer technologies that transform waste into renewable energy. This field tackles modern challenges surrounding food production, energy resources, and water sustainability.
Pursuing an environmental engineering degree opens career opportunities across various conservation areas, such as air quality regulation, workplace safety, radiation safety protocols, dangerous waste handling, toxic substance management, freshwater distribution, sewage treatment, floodwater control, refuse disposal, community health initiatives, and land conservation practices.
Students must meet the following requirements for admission: completion of academic upper secondary school (generally a total of 12-13 years of primary and secondary education); a corresponding secondary school diploma or leaving certificate; completion of minimum high school course requirements of the following: 4 years of English/language arts; 2 years in a single language of world languages; 3 years including courses in physical science, biology, chemistry, environmental science and physics of natural science; 3 years of social studies; 2 years of algebra; and 1 year of geometry.
English Language Requirements: