First Sri Lankin woman graduates from MUN engineering
Sandagiri is the university's first Sri Lankan woman to graduate from the program.
"This is the 100th year anniversary. So, for 100 years, I'm the only Sri Lankan girl who came here to do an engineering degree. I couldn't believe it when I heard it for the first time," she said.
Engineering wasn't always a career on Sandagiri's radar. She said engineering is considered a man's job in her home country.
"I had this idea about being a journalist one day. Then I had another idea because my parents are involved in banking, so I thought maybe I could be a banker too," Sandagiri said.
But a high school math teacher changed her trajectory after noticing her ability to problem solve. He pushed Sandagiri to pursue engineering.
"After high school, I did a national diploma in chemical engineering in Sri Lanka," she said. "I worked in the only oil refinery."
Her experience in the oil refinery led her to MUN. She said the tuition, the city's culture and the province's proximity to P.E.I. sealed the deal.
"I really wanted to be in a beautiful place where I like hiking. I like connecting with nature when I'm stressed," Sandagiri said. "The other fact was I'm a big fan of Anne of Green Gables the novel.… I got to know it's based on P.E.I. Then I realized, oh, it's closer, maybe I can go there for a visit."
Sandagiri didn't have an easy road through her degree. She worked to support herself financially while helping her family at home in Sri Lanka.
"I remember struggling to pay my tuition on time," she said. "At one point, I was sending groceries and medicine to my family during an economic crisis."
Now that she has completed her studies, Sandagiri is looking forward to the future.
"I wanted to migrate somewhere and do my higher education and work in oil and gas, not because of the money, but because of the complex experience I can get from that field," she said.
Sandagiri has a degree in process engineering. She will continue to work for the oil and gas industry with Suncor in Fort McMurray, Alta.
In the meantime, she hopes to inspire other women to pursue careers in science, technology, engineering and math.
"There was a handful of people I could look up to, especially women in engineering," Sandagiri said. "I'm one of them now."
Download our free CBC News app to sign up for push alerts for CBC Newfoundland and Labrador. Sign up for our daily headlines newsletter here. Click here to visit our landing page.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Bloomberg
2 hours ago
- Bloomberg
FLSmidth Has Firepower for Big M&A After Asset Sales, CEO Says
FLSmidth & Co. A/S, which agreed to sell two large assets in June, now has the ability to conduct large acquisitions because the Danish engineering group's balance sheet has been strengthened, Chief Executive Officer Mikko Keto said. 'We are active in looking at small ones but also have a firepower to acquire big assets,' the CEO said in a phone interview on Wednesday after the release of second-quarter earnings. 'We will focus on growth in the next leg of our strategy journey.'


Fast Company
4 hours ago
- Fast Company
Ford has a vision for the office of the future, and it starts with this 100-year-old building
Even though it was built more than 100 years ago, a former engineering lab on the Ford Motor campus in Dearborn, Michigan, is a vision of the company's future. The building originally opened in 1924 as a kind of early research and development lab, but Ford has now transformed it into a modern office building that the company sees as a model for its new global workplace standards. With more than 300 million square feet of offices in 46 countries, the approach for this one building will have wide implications for the face of the company, and the workforce it's able to attract. The Ford Engineering Lab, as it is still known, is Ford's version of a post-pandemic, human-centric workplace, according to Jennifer Kolstad, Ford's global design and brand director. Sitting on a long curving couch within one of the open collaboration and social spaces in the center of the building, she points out the range of spaces around her. There are small modular meeting rooms, clusters of desks for small teams, café seats, and cushy chairs with side tables that look straight out of a fancy hotel lobby. 'Before, Ford Motor Co. was a culture of desks,' Kolstad says. 'We have consciously worked to reconstruct the association with how work gets done, which is that work does not necessarily occur at a desk.'

Yahoo
a day ago
- Yahoo
Sinopec Engineering Sees 10 Percent Growth in 1H Revenue
This article was first published on Rigzone here Sinopec Engineering Group Co. Ltd. on Sunday reported CNY 31.56 billion ($4.39 billion) in revenue for the first half of 2025, up 10.1 percent from the first six months of 2024. The increase was 'mainly due to the fact that large-scale projects such as Aramco Huajin, SABIC Mangguo Ethylene, Jihua Transformation and Upgrading and Saudi Riyas entered construction or settlement peak', said the report on Sinopec Engineering's website. The petrochemical sector accounted for 63 percent of the total revenue of the energy and chemical engineering multinational, majority-owned by the state's China Petrochemical Corp., for January-June 2025. The sector logged a 0.3 percent year-on-year increase in revenue. Oil refining contributed 18.1 percent of total revenue. Oil refining revenue surged 85.9 percent. The new coal chemicals sector accounted for 4.1 percent of total revenue. Contribution from the sector grew 389.1 percent. The main contributing projects included Lianhong New Materials, China Coal Shaanxi Energy Coal Deep Processing and Inner Mongolia Rongxin Chemical Olefin. Storage, transport and others accounted for 14.8 percent of total revenue, their contribution falling 15.1 percent. By segment, engineering, procurement and construction (EPC) contracts accounted for 55.7 percent of total revenue. EPC contracts revenue increased 24.5 percent. Construction accounted for 37.6 percent of total revenue, its contribution sliding 1.6 percent. Engineering, consulting and licensing accounted for 5.6 percent of total revenue. Segment contribution increased 24.5 percent 'due to the increase in business volume', Sinopec Engineering said. Equipment manufacturing accounted for 1.1 percent of total revenue, its contribution inching up 1.3 percent. By region, China accounted for 76.5 percent of total revenue. Domestic revenue dropped 2.6 percent. Overseas activities accounted for 23.5 percent of total revenue. Overseas revenue increased 92 percent. Backlog at the end of 1H 2025 was CNY 212.28 billion, up 22.9 percent year-over-year. The bulk was from EPC contracting (CNY163.88 billion) by segment and petrochemicals (CNY101.93 billion) by sector. China accounted for CNY 124.42 billion of backlog. Net profit totaled CNY 1.39 billion, up 4.8 percent thanks to 'synergistic gains across engineering, technology and capital', the company said. Basic earnings per share landed at CNY 0.32. Take control of your THOUSANDS of Oil & Gas jobs on Search Now >> Sinopec Engineering, headquartered in Beijing but listed in Hong Kong, declared an interim dividend of CNY 0.16 per share, payable by October 27 to shareholders as of the close of business on September 9. Gross profit and operating profit increased 3.6 percent and 23.8 percent to CNY 2.6 billion and CNY 1.16 billion respectively. Profit before taxation increased 5.9 percent to CNY 1.61 billion. 'Gross profit margin decreased from 8.8 percent for the same period last year to 8.2 percent, which was mainly due to the settlement difficulties of some construction projects and intensified market competition of certain business operations', Sinopec Engineering said. Net cash flow from operating activities was CNY 3.3 billion for 1H 2025, compared to negative CNY 4.16 billion for 1H 2024. 'In 2025, the transformation and upgrading of China's domestic energy and chemical industry have accelerated, and the extension and deepening of the industrial chain have been deepened', Sinopec Engineering said. 'Oil-to-chemical products, oil-to-specialty products and high-end transformation have become key development trends, providing strong support for the fundamentals of the Group's domestic market. 'At the same time, new development paths such as CCUS (carbon capture, utilization and storage), zero-carbon energy substitution, renewal of old equipment and innovation in green and low-carbon technologies continued to inject new momentum into the Group's development. 'Globally, the Gulf region of the Middle East remains the largest market for oil, gas and refining and chemical capacity expansion. 'Central Asia has strong complementarity with China in terms of production capacity, capital, and engineering technologies, leading to more active investment in petrochemicals and natural gas chemicals. 'The rapid economic growth in Southeast Asia has driven the expansion of demand for refined oil, natural gas and chemical products; and economic development and industrialization needs in Africa and Latin America offer significant market potential'. Sinopec Engineering ended 1H 2025 with CNY 80.7 billion in current assets and CNY 54.4 billion in current liabilities. To contact the author, email More From The Leading Energy Platform: Golar LNG Posts Higher Revenue EU GHG Emissions Up 3.4 Percent YoY in 1Q Any Talks About USA Sanctions on Russia 'Now Blowing in the Wind' USA EIA Sees WTI Oil Price Under $48 Per Barrel in 2026 >> Find the latest oil and gas jobs on << Error in retrieving data Sign in to access your portfolio Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data