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Environmental Engineering
Environmental engineering is concerned with protecting human, animal, and plant
populations from the effects of adverse environmental factors, including toxic
chemicals and wastes, pathogenic bacteria, and global warming.
Environmental engineers also try to minimize the effect of human activities
on the physical and living environment so that we can all live more healthy
and sustainable lives.This field builds on other branches of engineering, especially
civil, chemical, and mechanical engineering. It also builds on information
from many of the sciences, such as chemistry, physics, hydrology, geology,
atmospheric science, and several specializations of biology (ecology, microbiology,
and biochemistry). Students who elect to study environmental engineering will
become familiar with many of these areas because maintaining and improving
the environment requires that problems be evaluated and solutions found using
a multidisciplinary approach.
Mission
The mission of the undergraduate environmental engineering program at Drexel
University is to graduate outstanding engineers who can identify, evaluate
and solve complex environmental problems, and who desire to continue their
education on a lifelong basis.
Program
Objectives
Environmental engineering graduates will become professionals who analyze,
design, construct, manage or operate facilities or systems to protect
or enhance the environment of people and other living things, or advance
knowledge of the field.
For more information about this
major, visit the Civil, Architectural and Environmental Engineering Department and the B.S. in Environmental Engineering page.
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