Becoming an accredited mining engineer requires a university or college degree. Training includes a
Bachelor of Engineering (B.Eng. or B.E.),
Bachelor of Science (B.Sc. or B.S.),
Bachelor of Technology (B.Tech.) or
Bachelor of Applied Science (B.A.Sc.) in mining engineering. Depending on the country and jurisdiction, to be licensed as a mining engineer may require a
Master of Engineering (M.Eng.),
Master of Science (M.Sc. or M.S.) or
Master of Applied Science (M.A.Sc.) degree. Some mining engineers who have come from other disciplines, primarily from engineering fields (e.g.: mechanical, civil, electrical, geomatics or environmental engineering) or from science fields (e.g.: geology, geophysics, physics, geomatics, earth science, or mathematics), typically completing a
graduate degree such as M.Eng, M.S., M.Sc. or M.A.Sc. in mining engineering after graduating from a different
quantitative undergraduate program. The fundamental subjects of mining engineering study usually include: •
mathematics;
calculus,
algebra,
numerical analysis,
statistics •
geoscience;
geochemistry,
geophysics,
mineralogy,
geomatics •
mechanics;
rock mechanics,
soil Mechanics,
geomechanics •
thermodynamics;
heat transfer,
mass transfer •
hydrogeology •
fluid mechanics;
fluid statics,
fluid dynamics •
Geostatistics;
spatial analysis •
control engineering;
control theory,
instrumentation •
surface mining;
open-pit mining •
underground mining (soft rock) •
underground mining (hard rock) •
computing;
DATAMINE,
MATLAB,
Maptek (Vulcan),
Seequent (Leapfrog),
GEOVIA (Surpac), Deswik, K-MINE, Micromine,
Golden Software (Surfer),
MicroStation, Carlson •
drilling and blasting •
solid mechanics;
fracture mechanics In the
United States, about 14 universities offer a B.S. degree in mining and mineral engineering. The top rated universities include
West Virginia University,
South Dakota School of Mines and Technology,
Virginia Tech, the
University of Kentucky, the
University of Arizona,
Montana Tech, and
Colorado School of Mines. Most of these universities offer M.S. and Ph.D. degrees. In
Canada, there are 19 undergraduate degree programs in mining engineering or equivalent.
McGill University Faculty of Engineering offers both undergraduate (B.Sc., B.Eng.) and graduate (M.Sc., Ph.D.) degrees in Mining Engineering. and the
University of British Columbia in
Vancouver offers a
Bachelor of Applied Science (B.A.Sc.) in Mining Engineering and also graduate degrees (M.A.Sc. or M.Eng and Ph.D.) in Mining Engineering. In
Europe, most programs are integrated (B.S. plus M.S. into one) after the
Bologna Process and take five years to complete. In
Portugal, the
University of Porto offers an M.Eng. in Mining and Geo-Environmental Engineering and in
Spain the
Technical University of Madrid offers degrees in Mining Engineering with tracks in Mining Technology, Mining Operations, Fuels and Explosives, Metallurgy. In the
United Kingdom, The
Camborne School of Mines offers a wide choice of BEng and MEng degrees in Mining engineering and other Mining related disciplines. This is done through the
University of Exeter. In
Romania, the
University of Petroșani (formerly known as the
Petroşani Institute of Mines, or rarely as the
Petroşani Institute of Coal) is the only university that offers a degree in Mining Engineering, Mining Surveying or Underground Mining Constructions, albeit, after the closure of
Jiu Valley coal mines, those degrees had fallen out of interest for most high-school graduates. In
South Africa, leading institutions include the University of Pretoria, offering a 4-year Bachelor of Engineering (B.Eng in Mining Engineering) as well as post-graduate studies in various specialty fields such as rock engineering and numerical modelling, explosives engineering, ventilation engineering, underground mining methods and mine design; and the
University of the Witwatersrand offering a 4-year
Bachelor of Science in Engineering (B.Sc.(Eng.)) in Mining Engineering as well as graduate programs (M.Sc.(Eng.) and Ph.D.) in Mining Engineering. Some mining engineers go on to pursue
Doctorate degree programs such as
Doctor of Philosophy (Ph.D., DPhil),
Doctor of Engineering (D.Eng., Eng.D.). These programs involve a significant original research component and are usually seen as entry points into academia. In the
Russian Federation, 85 universities across all federal districts are training specialists for the mineral resource sector. 36 universities are training specialists for extracting and processing solid minerals (mining). 49 are training specialists for extracting, primary processing, and transporting liquid and gaseous minerals (oil and gas). 37 are training specialists for geological exploration (applied geology, geological exploration). Among the universities that train specialists for the mineral resource sector, 7 are federal universities, and 13 are national research universities of Russia. Personnel training for the mineral resource sector in Russian universities is currently carried out in the following main specializations of training (specialist's degree): "Applied Geology" with the qualification of mining engineer (5 years of training); "Geological Exploration" with the qualification of mining engineer (5 years of training); "Mining" with the qualification of mining engineer (5.5 years of training); "Physical Processes in Mining or Oil and Gas Production" with the qualification of mining engineer (5.5 years of training); "Oil and Gas Engineering and Technologies" with the qualification of mining engineer (5.5 years of training). Universities develop and implement the main professional educational programs of higher education in the directions and specializations of training by forming their profile (name of the program). For example, within the framework of the specialization "Mining", universities often adhere to the classical names of the programs "Open-pit mining", "Underground mining of mineral deposits", "Surveying", "Mineral enrichment", "Mining machines", "Technological safety and mine rescue", "Mine and underground construction", "Blasting work", "Electrification of the mining industry", etc. In the last ten years, under the influence of various factors, new names of programs have begun to appear, such as: "Mining and geological information systems", "Mining ecology", etc. Thus, universities, using their freedom to form new training programs for specialists, can look to the future and try to foresee new professions of mining engineers. After the specialist's degree, you can immediately enrol in postgraduate school (analogue of
Doctorate degree programs, four years of training). ==Salary and statistics==