Takeover Tracker
vs

70 shared · 24 different

core competencies

Side-by-Side Comparison

MetricFire-Prevention and Protection EngineersMining and Geological Engineers, Including Mining Safety Engineers
Risk Score28.2%33.0%
Risk TierMedium RiskMedium Risk
Risk Percentile31th57th
Tasks at Risk (>50%)1 / 145 / 15
Median Salary$109,660$101,020
Employment23K7K

Skill Comparison

|

Sorted by largest difference

Building and Construction
Inspecting Equipment, Structures, or Material
Customer and Personal Service
Mathematical Reasoning
Mechanical
Design
Communicating with Persons Outside Organization
MathematicsAI-Vulnerable
Chemistry
Monitor Processes, Materials, or Surroundings
MonitoringAI-Augmented
Clerical

Protective Factors

Higher values indicate stronger protection against AI displacement

Fire-Prevention and Protection Engineers

30%

total discount

Mining and Geological Engineers, Including Mining Safety Engineers

31%

total discount

Task Risk Comparison

Tasks sorted by AI automation risk — higher means more automatable

Fire-Prevention and Protection Engineers

1 of 14 at risk
86%Prepare and write reports detailing specific fire prevention and protection issues, such as work performed, revised codes or standards, and proposed review schedules.
47%Conduct research on fire retardants and the fire safety of materials and devices.
47%Evaluate fire department performance and the laws and regulations affecting fire prevention or fire safety.
45%Develop plans for the prevention of destruction by fire, wind, and water.
43%Inspect buildings or building designs to determine fire protection system requirements and potential problems in areas such as water supplies, exit locations, and construction materials.

Mining and Geological Engineers, Including Mining Safety Engineers

5 of 15 at risk
86%Prepare technical reports for use by mining, engineering, and management personnel.
86%Monitor mine production rates to assess operational effectiveness.
85%Prepare schedules, reports, and estimates of the costs involved in developing and operating mines.
51%Examine maps, deposits, drilling locations, or mines to determine the location, size, accessibility, contents, value, and potential profitability of mineral, oil, and gas deposits.
51%Design, develop, and implement computer applications for use in mining operations such as mine design, modeling, or mapping or for monitoring mine conditions.

Wage Comparison

Mining and Geological Engineers, Including Mining Safety Engineers earns -$8,640(-8%) vs Fire-Prevention and Protection Engineers
Fire-Prevention and Protection EngineersMining and Geological Engineers, Including Mining Safety Engineers
10th
$62,050$62,500
25th
$85,400$81,040
Median
$109,660$101,020
75th
$136,150$129,860
90th
$166,670$163,740

Premium Head-to-Head Analysis

Displacement Timeline Comparison

Fire-Prevention and Protection Engineers20282035
Mining and Geological Engineers, Including Mining Safety Engineers20282035
20242030203520402045

Fire-Prevention and Protection Engineers has a longer runway before significant displacement, projected 0 years later than Mining and Geological Engineers, Including Mining Safety Engineers.

Risk-Adjusted Salary

Salary weighted by displacement risk: salary × (1 − risk%)

Fire-Prevention and Protection Engineers

$78,703

from $109,660

Mining and Geological Engineers, Including Mining Safety Engineers

$67,663

from $101,020

After adjusting for AI risk, Fire-Prevention and Protection Engineers offers $11,040 more in risk-adjusted pay.

Transition Feasibility

1%

Skill Overlap

Low overlap — significant retraining needed for transition

0

Unique to Fire-Prevention

0

Unique to Mining

Combined Protection Strategy

Regardless of which path you choose, focus on these protective factors

Decision Complexity
Creativity
Regulatory Barriers
Social Intelligence
Fire-Prevention and Protection EngineersMining and Geological Engineers, Including Mining Safety Engineers