The National - News

When chemical engineerin­g became a test of her mettle

▶ Shamsa Al Falasi has fought to break barriers, writes Haneen Dajani

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Since Shamsa Al Falasi decided eight years ago to specialise in chemical engineerin­g, a highly technical and maledomina­ted field, she has had to fight for respect from her male superiors.

Today, however, the 30-year-old Emirati not only holds a senior technical position at one of the world’s largest aluminium manufactur­ers, but she has also contribute­d to an innovation that her team will soon be patenting.

“When I chose [chemical engineerin­g], I knew I would be working with men most of the time, and I knew they would be [sceptical of me], especially as an Emirati woman,” Ms Al Falasi says.

“What was challengin­g is that it was a male-dominated industry and the minute they heard a female [would be working with them] they said: ‘Oh no, she won’t be able to do it’, because they thought a woman would resist certain jobs and not do some things.”

The lack of support from her male superiors, who were reluctant to train her, did not stop her from pursuing her passion.

Eight years later, she is a senior lab superinten­dent and it is her responsibi­lity to manage samples. If a chemical sample is delayed, if something is wrong with it, or if the customer wants something fixed, she has to deal with it.

During a regular working day, Mrs Al Falasi is busy in the raw materials lab, monitoring the quality of aluminium samples “from A to Z”, she says. She also supports the improvemen­t of the company’s plant, interprets test results and communicat­es them to customers.

Ms Al Falasi joined Emirates Aluminum – now Emirates Global Aluminum, or EGA – in 2010 as a graduate. “When I joined, there were only seven ladies working in the field,” she says. “My first manager did not want to teach me. I had to fight and push him to train me because when a manager sees a graduate coming in to learn and she is understand­ing things, he gets threatened, especially when he has been in the field for 25 years.”

Nonetheles­s, she was persistent and now, over time, “more females are studying these majors, and the vision of the country is pushing towards that”, Ms Al Falasi says.

Today, there are 440 women working at EGA.

Right now, her employer is in the process of seeking a patent for an automated resin column regenerati­on unit that will be four time faster than the manual procedure.

Ms Al Falasi says there is nothing like it anywhere else in the world.

The invention ensures the safety of employees by reducing the need for them to come into contact with the hydrochlor­ic acid that is used to clean the power plant’s resin columns.

It also significan­tly reduces the time taken to complete the process.

“Instead of taking two days to deliver [the sample], we can now deliver on the same day,” she says.

 ?? Chris Whiteoak / The National ?? Shamsa Al Falasi has demonstrat­ed that Emirati women can succeed in heavy industry
Chris Whiteoak / The National Shamsa Al Falasi has demonstrat­ed that Emirati women can succeed in heavy industry

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