1 / 30

Norwegian Research Landscape

Norwegian Research Landscape. Aleksandra Witczak Haugstad, senior adviser Research Council of Norway. THE Research Council of Norway. The Research Council of Norway Roles. Adviser to the government Research funding Support basic research Implement national thematic priorities

hazel
Télécharger la présentation

Norwegian Research Landscape

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Norwegian Research Landscape Aleksandra Witczak Haugstad, senior adviser Research Council of Norway

  2. THE Research Council of Norway

  3. The Research Council of NorwayRoles • Adviser to the government • Research funding • Support basic research • Implement national thematic priorities • Support private R&D • Networking and dissemination • Internationalization

  4. The Research Council canalises nearly 30 % of public funding of Norwegian R&D Universities Public funding Ministry of Education and Research Institutes The Research Council Other ministries i.e. Industry

  5. Several funding schemes Centers of Excellence Basic researchprogrammes National prioritiesLarge-scale programmes Innovation Basic research Tax deduction scheme Infrastructur

  6. Norwegian Research policy and priorities

  7. National priorities in research policies2008 White Paper Global challenges Welfare and science- based professions Business relevant research in strategic fields Improve health and health services Knowledge based business development in the regions A functioning research system High quality in the research Internationalisation of the research Efficient utilisation of results and resources

  8. National priorities2008 White Paper • global challenges • environment, • climate change • oceans, • food safety • energy • research • industry oriented research: • food, marine, maritime, tourism, • energy, environment, • biotechnology, ICT • new materials/nanotechnology

  9. PETROLEUM Ocean and coast CLEAN ENERGY CLIMIT Food programme CLIMATE Health programmes ICT NANOMAT Welfare and society Aquaculture GENOMICS From national priorities to RCN programmes Energy/ environment Oceans Food Health Technological priorities ICT New materials nanotechnology Public sector reforms Biotechnology

  10. VERDIKTCore Competence and Growth in ICT PETROMAKS Optimal Management of Petroleum Resources BIOTEK2012Biotechnology for Innovation NANO2012Nanotechnology and New Materials NORKLIMAClimate Change and its Impacts in Norway AQUACULTUREAn Industry in Growth Important funding instrument: Large-scale programmes • Strategic, long-term knowledge development to meet national research-policy priorities • Strategic and dynamic arena for communication and cooperation RENERGIClean Energy for the Future

  11. R&D Sector IN NORWAY

  12. Three different research sectors … Industry Institutes Higher Education

  13. …. With different roles! Development Applied research Basicresearch Industry Institutes Higher Education

  14. Development in total Norwegian R&D expenditure (1970-2008) Industry Billion (2000-NOK) Universities Institutes 1970 1980 1990 2000 ’08

  15. R&D institutions in Norway • Highereducationinstitutions • univeristies and university colleges • Universitiescombinetheirresponsibility for basicresearch and researcher training • Research institutes • research in cooperationwith trade and industry • Regional healthauthorities • University hospitals • Public institutions • Museums, libraries and archives • Business sector • Large companies • SME

  16. Information on Norwegian Research • Science and technology indicators for Norway • Research Council publishes a yearly report on science and technology indicators for Norway (www.rcn.no) • Evaluations • Institute Evaluations • Subject-specific evaluations • Basic Research in ICT (2012)Mathematical Sciences (2011)Earth Sciences (2011)Biology, Clinical Medicine and Health Science (2011)Geography Research (2011) • Policy Evaluations • Evaluations of the Research Council’s own activities

  17. Potential partners

  18. Who are the potential Norwegian partners? • Highereducationinstitutions • 8 universities • 9 specialiseduniversityinstitutions • 20 stateuniversity colleges • 51 researchinstitutes • Technology and industry • Environment • Society • Regional • Primarysector • Institutionswithinternationalorientation • Centres ofexcellence or specialpriority

  19. A. Higher education institutionspart 1 • Universities • Norwegian University of Life Sciences (UMB) • Norwegian University of Science and Technology (NTNU) • University of Agder (UiA) • University of Bergen (UiB) • University of Nordland (UiN) • University of Oslo (UiO) • University of Stavanger (UiS) • University of Tromsø (UiT) • 2 university centres: • University Centre in Svalbard (UNIS) • University Graduate Center at Kjeller (UNIK)

  20. A. Higher education institutionspart 2 • Specialised university institutions • BI - Norwegian Business School • Molde University College, Specialized University in Logistics (HiMolde) • NHH - Norwegian School of Economics • Norwegian Academy of Music (NMH) • Norwegian School of Sport Sciences (NIH) • Norwegian School of Veterinary Science • MF - Norwegian School of Theology • Oslo School of Architecture and Design (AHO) • School of Mission and Theology

  21. B. Research institutes Part 1 • Environment • CICERO • NIBR • NIKU • NILU • NINA • NIVA • TØI • NERSC • Primarysector • Bioforsk • Nofima • NILF • Norwegian Forest and Landscape Institute • Bygdeforsk • SINTEF Fiskeri og havbruk • Veterinærinstituttet

  22. B. Research institutes Part 2 • Society • AFI • FAFO • FNI • PRIO • ISF • NOVA • NIFU • NUPI • SFN • SINTEF Teknologi og samfunn • CMI • Frischsenteret • NTNU Samfunnsforskning AS • Uni Research AS

  23. B. Research institutes Part 3 • Technology and industry • Christian Michelsen Research AS (CMR)IFE • IRIS • NGI • NORSAR • MARINTEK • Norwegian Computing Center • NORUT Tromsø • NORUT Narvik • SINTEF Energiforskning AS • SINTEF, Stiftelse • SINTEF Petroleumsforskning AS • Stiftelsen Tel-Tek

  24. B. Research institutes Part 4 • Regional • Agderforskning • Møreforsking • Nordlandsforskning • NORUT Alta • Telemarksforskning Bø • Telemarksforskning Notodden • Trøndelag forskning og utvikling • Vestlandsforsking • Østfoldforskning AS • Østlandsforskning

  25. C. Norwegian participation in EU FP7 (as per January 2012) • Norway participates in over 6 % of all FP7 projects • 933 Norwegian projects retained • ¼ of those projects are coordinated from Norway • EU-contribution 3,4 billion NOK • about 4000 researchers from Norwegian institutions involved • Collaborative relationships with 111 countries Norway23,3 % EU20,7% Norge 26,4 % EU18,6 % Success rates (retained projects)

  26. C. R&D institutions with the highest number of EU FP7 participations • Sintef (95 participations, 60,4 mill EUR) • University of Oslo • University of Bergen • Norwegian University of Science and Technology • Research Council of Norway • Norwegian Institute for Air Research • National Institute of Technology • University of Tromsø • Institute of Marine Research • Norwegian Meteorological Institute • Nansen Center (NERSC) • Oslo University Hospital

  27. D. Norwegian Centers of Excellence Theoretical chemistry Economics Mind in Nature Ecology Cancer biomedicine Immune regulation Biomedicine and IT Neuroscience Mathematics Civil wars Physics/Geology Geohazards Theoretical linguistics Communication systems Ships and ocean structures Biology of memory Geo- biosphere Climate research Medieval studies Petroleum research Aquaculture protein

  28. D. Centres for Research-based Innovation Petroleum operations Telemedicine Concrete Marine bioactives Medical imaging Aquaculture technology Future manufacturing Structural impact Search engines Arctic marine technology Natural gas Measurement technology Multiphase flow Service innovation Statistics for innovation Sustainable fish capture Stem cells Cardiology Salmon louse Software systems Drilling and well technology

  29. D. Centres for Environment-friendlyEnergy Research Climate, energy and industry Renewableenergy systems CO2 capture and storage Zero emission buildings Offshore wind technology International politics and energy systems National energy policy Offshore wind energy Solar cell technology Bioenergy CO2 storage

  30. Thank you for your attention www.rcn.no/eea

More Related