The Warsaw University of Technology together with the Polish Alternative Fuels Association (PSPA) are organising a new postgraduate course. The course programme is offered under the name ‘New Mobility’. The unit organising the studies is the Faculty of Automobiles and Robotic Machines of the Warsaw University of Technology. The aim of the newly opened course is to train qualified specialists in electromobility. Increasing the number of professionals in the field of sustainable mobility is a response to the needs of the increasingly thriving economic sector that is electromobility.
– “The postgraduate studies ‘New Mobility’ are the response of the Faculty of SiMR of the Warsaw University of Technology to the needs of the changing labour market in the transport industry. They are dedicated to those interested in gaining knowledge and expanding their skills related to electromobility, the electric vehicle market and charging infrastructure, as well as all legal, social and economic issues related to the development of zero-emission technologies in transport,” says the Vice-Dean of the Faculty of Automotive and Mechanical Engineering at PW, Jacek Dybała, Ph.D., professor at the university.
The new course of study is expected to provide both technical knowledge – of the functioning of both electric cars and the infrastructure necessary for their operation, e.g. chargers – and knowledge of management, marketing and electromobility law.
– “The “New Mobility” postgraduate studies are the response of the SiMR Faculty of the Warsaw University of Technology to the needs of the changing labour market in the transport industry. They are dedicated to those interested in gaining knowledge and expanding their skills related to electromobility, the market for electric vehicles and charging infrastructure, as well as all legal, social and economic issues related to the development of zero-emission technologies in transport,” – continues Jacek Dybała, Ph.D., professor at PW.
Classes are to be held over two semesters, during which 12 sessions will be held and 30 subjects will be completed, with the whole course expected to take students 240 hours. Recruitment opened on 1 December 2022 and is still ongoing. Studies begin in the summer semester of 2023, so as early as February.