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Royal Academy of Engineering set to elect first Scottish President

The Trustee Board of the Royal Academy of Engineering has nominated Professor Sir Jim McDonald FREng, FRSE, Principal and Vice-Chancellor of the University of Strathclyde, as its Presidential candidate for election by Fellows at the September 2019 AGM.

Upon election, Sir Jim would serve a term of five years, and become the Academy’s first Scottish President. One of Scotland’s most accomplished engineers, he co-chairs the Scottish Government’s Energy Advisory Board, with the First Minister, is chairman of the Independent Glasgow Economic Leadership Board, and holds senior business appointments with the Weir Group, Scottish Power, the UK Offshore Renewable Energy Catapult, and the UK National Physical Laboratory.

Glasgow-born, he studied for his first degree in electrical engineering at the University of Strathclyde, and started his engineering career as a graduate apprentice on the Scottish Electrical Training Scheme. He worked in the electrical utility sector for seven years, and returned to the University in 1984 as a University Grants Commission New Blood Lecturer in Electrical Engineering. He was appointed to the Rolls-Royce chair in Electrical Power Systems in 1993, and became Principal and Vice- Chancellor of the University of Strathclyde in March 2009.

In the Queen’s Jubilee Birthday Honours List on 16 June 2012, Professor McDonald was awarded a Knighthood for services to education, engineering, and the economy. He is a Fellow of the Royal Academy of Engineering, the Royal Society of Edinburgh, the Institution of Engineering and Technology, and the Institute of Physics and the Energy Institute. He chairs two of the pan-Scotland research pools in Energy and Engineering, and is chair of the Royal Academy of Engineering Research Committee.

Sir Jim McDonald said: “It truly is an honour to be considered for the position of President of the Royal Academy of Engineering. To be recognised by the foremost engineering learned society in the world is both humbling and incredibly flattering. The Academy promotes engineering in all its forms, and is a champion for engineering excellence, industrial innovation, societal impact, and the nurturing of world-class talent. These are all matters I am passionate about, and I am also inspired by the Academy’s commitment to widening the appeal of engineering, not least for girls and young women, along with those from non-traditional backgrounds.

“Scotland has a strong tradition of engineering excellence – from James Watt to John Logie Baird – and I am proud and delighted to be the first Scot to nominated for this position. I am hugely thankful to the Trustees for recommending me to the Fellows for consideration.”

 

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