The Academic Institute of Excellence (AIE) has launched five new engineering qualifications, ranging from Higher Certificate entry points at NQF Level 5 through to a Bachelor of Engineering Technology at NQF Level 7, in direct response to South Africa’s deepening engineering skills crisis.
The new qualifications span Civil Engineering, Mechanical Engineering, Electrical and Electronics Engineering, and Mechatronic Engineering – disciplines that sit at the heart of South Africa’s infrastructure rebuild, energy transition, and industrial development agenda. The Engineering Council of South Africa and the Department of Higher Education have consistently flagged these as priority skills areas, with estimates placing the national engineering shortfall at more than 40,000 qualified professionals.
The full suite of new engineering offerings comprises the Bachelor of Engineering Technology in Civil Engineering at NQF Level 7, a Diploma in Mechanical Engineering at NQF Level 6, and Higher Certificates in Civil Engineering, Electrical and Electronics Engineering, and Mechatronic Engineering – all at NQF Level 5.
The launch is timed to coincide with a critical moment in South Africa’s qualifications landscape. The recent phasing out of 1,475 pre-2009 legacy qualifications has created urgency for students enrolled in outgoing programmes to secure modern, recognised alternatives. AIE’s five new engineering qualifications are fully current, industry-aligned, and ECSA-outcomes-driven – structured to give graduates the technical depth required for professional registration and real-world employment from day one.
The NQF Level 5 Higher Certificates provide a recognised entry point for school leavers and career changers who may not yet meet direct degree admission requirements, creating a pipeline into the engineering profession that has historically been too narrow. The NQF Level 6 Diploma and NQF Level 7 degree complete the ladder – allowing students to progress within a single institution from their first qualification through to professional-grade study.
Leon Smalberger, CEO of AIE, said: “South Africa does not have an engineering talent problem – it has an access problem. There is no shortage of people with the ability to become engineers. For too long, however, the pathway into the profession has been too narrow, too expensive, and too rigid. These five qualifications are a direct response to that reality – structured to be accessible at multiple entry points while producing graduates who are technically credible and industry-ready from the moment they qualify.
“Engineering and information technology are not simply career choices. They are the disciplines that will determine whether South Africa builds its own infrastructure, secures its own data, and writes its own code – or continues to depend on skills it does not produce in sufficient numbers.” All five engineering qualifications are open for enrolment now. For full qualification details, entry requirements, and application information, visit: www.aie.ac



