This video appeared in Machine Design and has been published here with permission.
This video is part of the TechXchange: Workers in Science and Engineering (WISE).
There’s no better way to celebrate International Women’s Day 2023 than to raise the profile of women going about their daily business and making a huge impact along the way.
With demand for sustainability and engineering executives on the rise, Iana Aranda, director of Engineering Global Development at the American Society of Mechanical Engineers (ASME), fits the profile of a woman forging change.
In an interview with Machine Design, Aranda, who leads a team that operates at the intersection of engineering and sustainable development, discussed how she leverages her mechanical engineering expertise to support global sustainable development.
“I manage a portfolio of programs and platforms that advance the Sustainable Development Goals as envisaged by the United Nations,” said Aranda. “In terms of practical application, specifically [leverage] the engineering skill set and expertise to direct a diverse global workforce towards how they can participate, how they can contribute. We are really architecting new initiatives, new programs, developing the opportunities for these engineers to participate, get skilled in and how to contribute.”
Aranda said she is proud to lean in to ASME’s climate strategy and what the association is doing to advance solutions to the climate crisis. Her career accomplishments and successes along the way are palpable:
- Aranda co-founded Engineering For Change (E4C), a platform that educates and activates the international technical workforce by providing resources and access to expertise to accelerate the development of solutions and infuse engineering into sustainable development.
- She established a fee-for-service model and secured clients such as World Bank’s infoDev Climate unit, U.S. Department of Energy’s Water Power Technologies Office and National Renewable Energy Lab, Siemens USA, Conservation X Labs, and USAID, demonstrating program viability.
- She also developed the strategy and refined the operational framework of ASME ISHOW, an accelerator benefiting more than 180 social enterprises advancing the U.N. Sustainable Development Goals.
Looking to the future, Aranda said she hopes to build on her work and “apply the force of engineering and the community globally to advance innovative solutions and a new way of engineering those solutions to ensure that we improve quality of life for every single person on this planet.”
On International Women’s Day 2023 (#EmbraceEquity), we congratulate women like Aranda, and are proud to support a movement that drives gender parity and forges inclusive work cultures.
Bookmark this page on our sister site Machine Design for the latest series of Workers in Science & Engineering (WISE) webinars and to keep pace with an initiative that builds awareness about barriers facing equity-seeking groups in the engineering industry.
Editor’s Note: Electronic Design's Workers in Science and Engineering (WISE) hub compiles our coverage of gender representation issues affecting the engineering field, in addition to contributions from equity seeking groups and subject matter experts within various subdisciplines.