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Meeting Baker Hughes-NTNU Ingvald Strømmen Dean of Engineering Science and Technology, NTNU

Meeting Baker Hughes-NTNU Ingvald Strømmen Dean of Engineering Science and Technology, NTNU. Shaping the future. ” NTNU has shaped Norway. The technological and cultural innovations that contributed to Norway ’ s development into a modern society stem from NTNU.

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Meeting Baker Hughes-NTNU Ingvald Strømmen Dean of Engineering Science and Technology, NTNU

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  1. Meeting Baker Hughes-NTNUIngvald StrømmenDean of Engineering Science and Technology, NTNU

  2. Shaping the future • ”NTNU has shaped Norway. The technological and cultural innovations that contributed to Norway’s development into a modern society stem from NTNU. • NTNU has a proud history. Now we need NTNU to explore what Norway should live of in the future”. Prime Minister Mr. Jens Stoltenberg Prime Minister of Norway, Mr. Stoltenberg, at the opening of NTNUs Centennial Celebration

  3. FACTS NTNU key figures Vision: Internationally Outstanding 2020. Top ten in Europe in Technology. 53 departments in 7 faculties 20 000 registered students, 7000 admitted/year 3000 degrees awarded a year 48 Bachelor’s programmes 82 two-year Master’s programmes 22 five-year Master’s programmes 80% of Norways Masters in Engineering (Sivilingeniør) 314 doctoral degrees awarded in 2008 (The goal in 2010: 350) 4320 employees 2600 empl. in education and research; 555 professors Annual Budget: 500M€ (140M€ externally funded)

  4. EDUCATION Student town No. 1 In Trondheim, one in five inhabitants is a student The student union – Studentersamfundet – is the centre of student activities UKA, the student week, is Norway’s largest cultural festival ISFiT = International Student Festival in Trondheim NTNUI is Norway’s largest sports association with 10 000 members NTNU, May 2006

  5. The Faculty of Engineering Science and Technology EMPLOYEES BY TYPE 181 Professors (Full, Assistant, Adjunct) 141 Post Doctorate Fellows Researchers, 177 Technical and adm. staff 246 Research FellowsResearch Assistants • 745 employees in 10 Departments - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - » • 3000 students in 7 degree programs (500-600 new MSc* every year) • 470 PhD students (60 new PhD’s / year) • 47000 m2 of laboratory space (including SINTEF) • 100 FTE** in post graduate education (2007) • Budget: 390 MNOK (+ 305 MNOK external activities) (2008) • 474 scientific publication points, level 1 & 2 in 2009 * MSc = Master of Science [Sivilingeniør] ** FTE= Full Time Equivalent [Årsenheter]

  6. IVT- Departments and study programmes Departments at theFaculty * Study programmesat theFaculty * The multi-disciplinaryprogrammeEngineering Science and ICT is related to 8 of 10 departments

  7. Faculty of Engineering Science and Technology – Programmes of study • MSc programmes, 5 years • Civil and Environmental Engineering • Engineering Science and ICT • Geotechnology • Marine Technology • Petroleum Geosciences and Engineering • Product Design and Manufacturing • Industrial Design Engineering • Energy and Environmental Engineering • Erasmus Mundus, 2 years • Master in Coastal and Marine Engineering and Management • International MSc programmes, 2 years • Coastal and Marine Civil Engineering • Geotechnics and Geohazards • Hydropower Development • Industrial Ecology • Innovative Sustainable Energy Engineering (New from 2009) • Marine Coastal Development • Marine Technology • Natural Gas Technology (New from 2009) • Petroleum Engineering/Petroleum Geosciences • Reliability, Availability, Maintainability and Safety • Norwegian MSc programmes, 2 years • Civil and Environmental Engineering • Geology • Marine Technology • Petroleum Geosciences and Engineering • Product Design and Manufacturing • Industrial Design Engineering • Subsea Technology (New from 2009) • Bachelor, 3 years • Geology

  8. NTNU’s six Strategic Research Areas • Energy and petroleum – resources and environment– because energy use has to be sustainable and efficient • Medical Technology– because health is one of our greatest challenges • Materials Science– because materials are the basis for new technology • Marine and maritime research – because the ocean offers large quantities of unused resources and unexploited opportunities • Information and communication technology – because man has to communicate • Globalisation – because the world is becoming a global village

  9. R & D Centres of Excellence Centre for Quantifiable Quality of Service in Communication Systems – Q2S Centre for the Biology of Memory – CBM Centre for Ships and Ocean Structures – CESOS Duration: 2003–2013 Annual Budget: 2-5M€ per Center Funded by the Research Council of Norway, NTNU and industry Nationally selected research groups at NTNU of high international standard that are governed by uniform management principles. NTNU, August 2005

  10. R & D Centers for Research Based Innovation Center Budget: 3-4 M€ per year in 8 years financed by The Norwegian Researh council, Industry and NTNU • NTNU appointed partner in 10 out of 14 National Centers. • 6 Centers at The Faculty of Engineering Science and Technology: • -Center for e-field and Integrated Operations for Upstream Petroleum Activities • -Structural Impact Laboratory – SIMLab • -COIN – Concrete Innovation Centre • -CREATE – Centre for Research-based Innovation in Aquaculture Technology • -Multiphase Flow Assurance Innovation Centre • -Norwegian Manufacturing Future

  11. Norway - an energy nation……. 3 generations of energy development: Hydro Power, Petroleum, Renewables

  12. Centres for Environment-friendly Energy Research (ENERGISENTER) The objective of the scheme for Centres for Environment-friendly Energy Research (CEER) is to establish time-limited research centres which conduct concentrated, focused and long-term research of high international caliber in order to solve specific challenges in the field. • BIGCCS Centre – International CCS Research Centre – SINTEF Energiforskning • Research Centre for Offshore Wind Technology – SINTEF Energiforskning • Centre for Environmental Design of Renewable Energy – SINTEF Energiforskning • The Norwegian Research Centre for Solar Cell Technology – IFE • Bioenergy Innovation Centre – UMB • The Research Centre on Zero Emission Buildings – NTNU

  13. Ways of cooperation between Industry and NTNU to establish long term win-win situations • Workshops on selected topics and regular seminars within the different areas of cooperation. • MSc thesis within industrial relevant topics. • PhD scholarships and PostDocs. , some with international cooperation with selected top ranked universities • Professorships (fulltime and/or prof2) at NTNU • Access to NTNUs international networks • Scholarships and Summer jobs for students • Student related activities in cooperation with student organisations • Continuing education and courses for Industrial personnel • Membership in industrial networks connected to study programs • Top Management follow up. Annual status meetings.

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