howardoark
Geotechnical
- Nov 9, 2005
- 91
I have to give a presentation to the management of my company (we're in the 4500 person range) on geotechnical engineering. We're mainly an environmental firm, but we have around 60 geotechnical engineers. Of the geotechnical engineers, 20 do straight geotechnical engineering (everything from giant USACE projects to designing foundations for houses) and 40 do "GeoEnvironmental Engineering" - soft sediments, slurry walls, excavations, et cetera.
No one in the environmental business believes that the gravey train is going to continue forever (in fact, it's been pretty gloomy for 10 years), but margins are still pretty high in the environmental business. The general feeling in the company's management is that geotechnical engineering is a low-margin, high liability business to be in.
I don't necessarily agree with that, but I don't have any evidence that isn't an accurate depiction. I see that the environmental engineers generally have higher billing rates than I do and I imagine they get sued less. But the US needs $300 to $400 billion in infrastructure work every year and it really doesn't "need" any more environmental cleanup (by that, I mean that spending $100,000,000 to clean up 30 acres in the middle of no where that will still be polluted in 200 years after the money's spent and which has an economic value of $0.50 isn't really something we need).
What is the general sense out there regarding our low-margin, high-liability avocation?
Thanks
No one in the environmental business believes that the gravey train is going to continue forever (in fact, it's been pretty gloomy for 10 years), but margins are still pretty high in the environmental business. The general feeling in the company's management is that geotechnical engineering is a low-margin, high liability business to be in.
I don't necessarily agree with that, but I don't have any evidence that isn't an accurate depiction. I see that the environmental engineers generally have higher billing rates than I do and I imagine they get sued less. But the US needs $300 to $400 billion in infrastructure work every year and it really doesn't "need" any more environmental cleanup (by that, I mean that spending $100,000,000 to clean up 30 acres in the middle of no where that will still be polluted in 200 years after the money's spent and which has an economic value of $0.50 isn't really something we need).
What is the general sense out there regarding our low-margin, high-liability avocation?
Thanks