SAIMC


SAIMC: From the office of the CEO: Understanding the Engineering Profession Act

May 2025 SAIMC


Johan Maartens.

The Engineering Profession Act is now complete

This is not just the Professional Engineers Act, it applies to technicians, technologists and engineers. It’s been around for 25 years and can now finally be fully implemented.

The Act applies to you personally

You cannot defend yourself by saying that your employer made you do it. Doing unregistered engineering work could lead to serious consequences, like a fine of up to double the salary you earned during that time and a criminal record.

ECSA’s role is to protect the public

ECSA is only there to help you get your professional registration recognised worldwide.

• ECSA audits education institutions to ensure that the curricula are up to international standards.

• Your practical experience is peer-reviewed to ensure that you’ve gained deep, relevant expertise, and not just repeated the same work forty times over.

What counts as engineering work?

If your actions have an impact on a production process, the chances are that you are doing engineering work; but this also depends on the complexity of the problem being solved.

• Routine maintenance is the work of an artisan, sometimes erroneously called a technician. Artisans are the lifeblood of the industry, but they are not impacted by the Engineering Profession Act.

• Technicians work is described as Well Defined. Problems can be solved in standardised or well described ways.

• Technologists work is defined as Broadly Defined. Problems are ill-posed, are under- or over-specified, and require identification and interpretation in the technology area.

• Engineers work is defined as Complex. These problems normally fall outside the scope of usual standards and codes.

This list is not meant to be complete, but rather to help you understand at what level the act starts becoming applicable. Here are few examples to illustrate the above when a critical component in a process fails and the engineering practitioner goes to the stores to find a replacement.

The practitioner installs the replacement and saves the company millions of rands. This is work that an artisan is more than capable of doing. The artisan need not register, even though the company was saved from huge losses.

There is no replacement. The practitioner looks in a catalogue and does not see a replacement. If there was one, an artisan could have installed the replacement. It is now necessary to look at the process parameters and physical restraints, and find another product in the catalogue that can be used as a replacement. This is the work of a technician.

There is no replacement, even in the catalogue. The practitioner now looks at the process parameters and physical constraints and still cannot find a replacement. Due to his understanding of the process, the process parameters and the practical limitations, he finds a replacement that is not specified as an equivalent replacement, but the replacement falls within the margins of his calculations to be suitable for the job at hand. This is the work of a technologist.

No replacement can be found in the catalogue or by looking at the process parameters and physical constraints. The only way the problem can be solved is by replacing the faulty element with a unique design or system designed by the practitioner which has not been done before, or by getting input from various other disciplines or calculations. This is the work of an engineer.

Who does this affect?

This Act is not only applicable to suppliers, but also to maintenance practitioners and anyone who claims to do fine-tuning, maintenance, consulting, process optimisation, advising, etc. This is what you can do:

• Make sure you understand whether you are doing engineering work or not.

• Watch the calendar on the SAIMC website for workshops to guide you through the registration process, and attend them.

• Visit the SAIMC website for opportunities to gain knowledge and obtain CPD points.

Yours in automation,

Johan Maartens Pr. Eng.


Credit(s)



Share this article:
Share via emailShare via LinkedInPrint this page

Further reading:

SAIMC: From the office of the CEO: Is AI turning us into idiots?
SAIMC SAIMC
When calculators were first introduced, there were several concerns, particularly in the educational sector. Many educators and parents feared that students would become too reliant on calculators and ...

Read more...
SAIMC Johannesburg branch
SAIMC SAIMC
The SAIMC Johannesburg branch recently hosted the June Technology Evening. The presentation covered HVAC systems through the lens of instrumentation, highlighting how sensor technologies form the backbone of effective monitoring and control, allowing for effective energy efficiency.

Read more...
SAIMC Durban branch
SAIMC SAIMC
The SAIMC Durban Branch hosted its latest technology meeting on 4 June.The event drew a strong turnout, highlighting the keen interest in the topic ‘Understanding Level Measurement: Contact vs Non-Contact Methods’.

Read more...
SAIMC at KITE 2025
SAIMC
The Society for Automation, Instrumentation, Mechatronics and Control Engineering (SAIMC) invites you to connect with us at the KwaZulu-Natal Industrial Technology Exhibition (KITE) from Tuesday 22 to Thursday 24 July 2025.

Read more...
SAIMC User Advisory Council annual summit
SAIMC Supplier Advisory Council SAIMC
The SAIMC User Advisory Council is proud to present the 2025 Annual Summit, formerly known as the MESA Africa Summit. The theme is ‘Mining and manufacturing in South Africa: SMART operations in a disruptive world economy’.

Read more...
SAIMC: From the office of the CEO: Recognising winners
SAIMC SAIMC
The Africa Automation and Technology Fair proved to be another successful event – and that is before any formal figures have been released.

Read more...
SAIMC: Durban branch
SAIMC SAIMC
The Durban branch of the SAIMC was pleased to welcome Vusi Sithole, managing member of Hybrid Control Corporation in Richards Bay, who presented\on the very pertinent topic of ‘Infrastructure monitoring and control for water loss management’.

Read more...
SAIMC: Sunshine, swings and smiles: Durban Golf Day hits a high note
Technews Publishing (SA Instrumentation & Control) SAIMC
We say it every year, and we’ll say it again: May in Durban is hard to beat; but 9 May, when the Durban Golf Day teed off at Kloof Country Club, was something else. With sunny skies and temperatures in the upper 20s, it was a fantastic day, full of fun and great energy.

Read more...
SAIMC User Advisory Council KS4I event: Bridging the industry/education divide
SAIMC
Horst Weinert, head of Didactic at Festo Southern/Eastern Africa, will be sharing some of Festo’s Didactic experiences of working across industry and education. He will cover training for productivity and employability in the public and private sectors, discussing especially the potential for inter-company training centres.

Read more...
SAIMC: Johannesburg branch
SAIMC SAIMC
The local Johannesburg Branch of the SAIMC recently hosted a Technology Evening at Bryanston Sports Club on 9 April 2025.

Read more...









While every effort has been made to ensure the accuracy of the information contained herein, the publisher and its agents cannot be held responsible for any errors contained, or any loss incurred as a result. Articles published do not necessarily reflect the views of the publishers. The editor reserves the right to alter or cut copy. Articles submitted are deemed to have been cleared for publication. Advertisements and company contact details are published as provided by the advertiser. Technews Publishing (Pty) Ltd cannot be held responsible for the accuracy or veracity of supplied material.




© Technews Publishing (Pty) Ltd | All Rights Reserved