Code of Ethics
(Approved at the Special General Meeting of March 2022)

The respect which society accords the engineering professions is earned and maintained by its members demonstrating a strong and consistent commitment to ethical values. These commitments are additional to the obligations, which every member of society is required to observe, such as obeying the law, and reflect the additional responsibility expected of all professionals. It therefore follows that the Institution must maintain an appropriate Code of Ethics, to publish it for the information of the public and to enforce it impartially. This Code must be responsive to the changing expectations of both society and the profession and the global standards to which the Institution subscribes.

The Code of Ethics is based on the five fundamental ethical values as follows:

  1. Protection of life and safeguarding people
  2. Sustainable management and care for the environment
  3. Commitment to community well-being
  4. Professionalism, integrity and competence
  5. Sustaining engineering knowledge

The Code consists of three Parts. The first is a set of five fundamental ethical values. These values are intended to inform Members of the high ideals of professional life.

Part II provides expanded guidelines. These guidelines are not exhaustive – they are offered as a guide to the understanding and intentions of Part I. They should be read with Part I as a whole and given a free and liberal meaning. They range from exhortations to excellence to prescriptive directions as to what constitutes ethical professional behaviors.

Part III sets out the minimum standards of behaviors against which the behaviors of Members will be judged in terms of deciding if they have reasonably complied with the requirement in the Rules of the Institution to behave ethically. Members will find in the three Parts assistance in deciding the proper response to most of the situations they will meet in their professional life.

In the final analysis, the judgement of the Member’s peers as to what the reasonable professional would have done faced with the same situation and applying the same provisions in Part III will prevail.

The Institution may issue information such as definitions of terminology to further assist Members interpret the Code. Such information does not form part of the Code.