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  • Bugs reveal the richness of species on Earth

    An international team of researchers has carried out a survey of the biological diversity in a tropical rainforest. Their efforts have helped them find the key to one of the existential questions to which people have long sought an answer: how many species exist on Earth?

    Published: 07.01.2013
  • First ever European-African joint call for proposals

    In January, the first ever joint European-African call for proposals will be issued. Norway will participate in the thematic area of renewable energy.

    Published: 20.12.2012
  • Nanoscale impulse radar measures depth of snow and ice

    Snow is the be-all and end-all for alpine ski resorts. Now a tiny sensor has been developed to determine how much cold gold there is on the slopes and how much more should be produced. The sensor is based on Norwegian radar technology and is no larger than a match head.

    Published: 17.12.2012
  • Cutting CO2 emissions with innovative technology

    Researchers are testing a variety of technological solutions in the battle to reduce CO2 emissions. On this technological front, there is room for not just one but many winners

    Published: 17.12.2012
  • Better opportunities for talented young researchers

    The Research Council of Norway has allocated funding for ten new national graduate-level researcher schools. The researcher schools will receive a total of NOK 218 million as part of the effort to enhance doctoral programmes.

    Published: 17.12.2012
  • Enormous interest in Polish-Norwegian research cooperation

    The Polish-Norwegian Research Programme, funded under the scheme for EEA and Norway Grants, received a total of 269 joint project proposals for the November application deadline. This is almost four times the number received in the previous programme period.

    Published: 17.12.2012
  • Big-data research spurs industrial development

    One of the world’s largest specialist groups within the field of big-data analytics is being assembled in Norway. The centre for Information Access Disruptions (iAD), with its head office in Tromsø, is at the core of this activity.

    Published: 13.12.2012
  • New report will influence Norwegian energy research

    The Global Energy Assessment Report (GEA) provides policymakers around the world with a variety of pathways they can follow to solve global energy challenges. Research will play an important role in achieving the goals set out in the report.

    Published: 06.12.2012
  • Many seeking a research stay in Norway

    Upwards of one-fourth of the grant applications submitted for the 28 November deadline were addressed to the Research Council of Norway’s guest researcher programme, the YGGDRASIL mobility programme. The largest call for proposals was issued by the Research Programme on Sickness Absence, Work and Health (SYKEFRAVAER).

    Published: 04.12.2012
  • The petroleum sector: Interplay between governance and industry

    Insight into the interplay between policy, economics and petroleum activities is critical for Norway as a major oil and gas-exporting nation. Over the past six years, activities under the Programme on Social Science Petroleum Research (PETROSAM) at the Research Council of Norway have resulted in new knowledge in this field.

    Published: 03.12.2012
  • NOK 100 million for projects on cultural conditions underlying social change

    The Research Council of Norway has awarded a total of NOK 100 million in funding to 15 projects under the Programme on Cultural Conditions Underlying Social Change (SAMKUL). This is the first round of grant allocations under the new programme.

    Published: 03.12.2012
  • Priorities for Norwegian research for 2014

    The Research Council of Norway is recommending an increase of NOK 1 billion for research in its proposal to the national budget for 2014. Close to half of this increase would be distributed among eight main priority areas.

    Published: 26.11.2012
  • Found the brain’s GPS

    The husband-and-wife team of Edvard and May-Britt Moser have put Norwegian neuroscience research on the international map. “We could never have achieved this without the Centres of Excellence scheme (SFF),” they assert.

    Published: 26.11.2012
  • Fish feed for sustainable aquaculture

    Norwegian researchers have been leading an international effort to make aquaculture more sustainable. In 10 years they have revolutionised fish feed.

    Published: 26.11.2012
  • Using computing power to develop science disciplines

    Applied mathematics is making its mark in more and more areas, thanks in great part to impressive new high-performance computers. Norway’s first and only Centre of Excellence (SFF) in mathematics so far is helping to realise the scientific opportunities of these powerful new tools.

    Published: 26.11.2012
  • Combining disciplines yields more oil

    The idea ten years ago was to integrate four classical disciplines in order to enhance petroleum research. Today, this collaboration between mathematicians, geologists, physicists and chemists has laid the foundation for recovering more oil and gas.

    Published: 23.11.2012
  • Mitigating damage from landslides, tsunamis and earthquakes

    Where are the risks of landslide greatest? What makes a tsunami dangerous? Why are some people harder hit by earthquakes than others? Norway is home to an international research centre for geohazards that is providing the answers needed to better deal with these types of risks.

    Published: 23.11.2012
  • Supplying tools to counteract civil war

    For ten years, prominent researchers have combined their efforts to uncover key perspectives characterising the groups that are engaged in civil war and the causes behind the onset and development of these wars.

    Published: 23.11.2012
  • Elite research centres are here to stay

    Ten years ago, 13 Norwegian research groups were awarded the status of Centre of Excellence (SFF) with generous funding to provide fruitful conditions for research over a ten-year period. At the time, the scheme represented an entirely new kind of research funding in Norway. “And it really has led to change,” says Director General of the Research Council of Norway, Arvid Hallén.

    Published: 22.11.2012
  • Language designed for thinking

    Language did not evolve to facilitate human communication; it developed as a tool for humans to use in their thinking process. This has been confirmed by exciting research carried out by Norwegian linguists.

    Published: 22.11.2012
  • Helping Internet users demand more from communication systems

    Users should be the focal point when defining and assessing the quality of Internet services, believe top Norwegian researchers.

    Published: 22.11.2012
  • Studying the forces in rock

    Activities at the research centre Physics of Geological Processes (PGP) at the University of Oslo have been specifically set up for cooperation between physicists and geologists. Without this inter-disciplinary approach, the findings that are gaining the PGP international notice would not have been possible.

    Published: 22.11.2012
  • Important brain discoveries

    Ten years after the Norwegian Centre for Molecular Biology and Neuroscience was established it now stands an innovative institution whose interdisciplinary research on DNA repair mechanisms in the brain is at the very forefront of the field.

    Published: 22.11.2012
  • Norway to take over as Chair of EUREKA

    In the summer of 2013, Norway will assume the chairmanship of the EUREKA innovation network.

    Published: 21.11.2012
  • Fruitful research collaboration between Norway and the US

    Norway’s research activities make up just one per cent of the world’s total while the US towers above all others. Nonetheless, the two countries collaborate closely in many areas, and their cooperation both can and should be expanded.

    Published: 20.11.2012
  • Darkened fjord waters mean fewer fish, more jellyfish

    The seawater in the Baltic Sea, the North Sea, and Norway’s coastal waters and fjords is gradually getting darker. Researchers are observing signs similar to those from overproduction of organic compounds. The result may be fewer marine areas with fish, and more jellyfish.

    Published: 19.11.2012
  • Top centres are a Norwegian research success story

    Generous, long-term financing of research centres has led to internationally cutting-edge results. The 13 initial Norwegian Centres of Excellence (SFF centres) have left a lasting footprint.

    Published: 19.11.2012
  • When Norway became part of Europe

    As early as the Middle Ages, European influence was already shaping Norway in critical ways. Researchers are looking at how Christianity altered Norwegian policies, laws and culture and how the elite became part of a shared European culture.

    Published: 19.11.2012
  • Supplying knowledge to vital Norwegian industries

    Originally, the focus at the Centre for Ships and Ocean Structures (CeSOS) was squarely directed on three industries critical to the Norwegian economy: aquaculture, petroleum and shipping. Over the past decade, however, the new industry of renewable energy has emerged in a strong position.

    Published: 19.11.2012
  • Provider of climate expertise

    When the Bjerknes Centre for Climate Research was established, the aim was to become a world leader in its field. The list of publications and the high demand for the centre’s expertise make it clear that the goal has been achieved.

    Published: 19.11.2012