Competence-building Project for Industry
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Important dates
28 Jan 2026
Open for applications
11 Mar 2026
Application deadline
01 Oct 2026
Earliest permitted project start
01 Apr 2027
Latest permitted project start
31 Mar 2031
Latest permitted project completion date
Important dates
Purpose
The purpose of this call is to stimulate research organisations to collaborate with the business sector to build knowledge that the business sector and society need to solve major societal and business challenges. We require the business community to contribute with cash financing in the projects.
About the call for proposals
Through this call, we support projects that, in a binding collaboration between the R&D sector and the business sector, develop new knowledge that is necessary to meet important societal and business challenges.
We require that you include industry actors as collaborating partners in the project and that they fund part of the R&D actors' costs.
The research in the project can be both basic and applied science.
We reserve the right to make changes to the call after we have received letters of allocation from the ministries for 2026.
Before you apply, you must familiarise yourself with the Guide for applicants – Knowledge-building Projects for the Industrial Sector.
- Here you can see a video presentation of how to fill out the application form. The video is from 2024, and the dates mentioned are the application deadlines in 2024. However, the general content also applies to this call. The video is in Norwegian.
The call is available in both Norwegian and English. The text of the Norwegian call for proposals is legally binding.
Who is eligible to apply?
Only approved Norwegian research organisations are eligible to apply. See the list of approved research organisations.
Who can participate in the project?
Requirements relating to the Project Owner
The organisation listed as the Project Owner in the application form must have approved the submission of the application to the Research Council. The application must be strategically anchored with the Project Owner.
Requirements relating to the project manager
We will shortly publish several calls for proposals where research organisations will be the Project Owner. These will have a deadline at the end of April, end of May or mid-June 2026. You can only be the project manager for one application for this application or the calls mentioned above. This means that if you are the project manager for an application under this call, you cannot be the project manager for applications for any of the other calls for proposals aimed at research organisations with a deadline in April, May or June.
The project manager's professional competence and suitability to carry out the project will be assessed by peers. There are no formal requirements for the project manager's qualifications.
Requirements for collaboration and roles in the project
- The project must have at least two Norwegian collaborating partners from the industrial sector (see the guidelines for definition) who provide cash funding for the project. The cash funding must be confirmed in a letter of intent.
- The application must be strategically supported by all collaborating partners. They must also confirm this in the letters of intent.
- The Project Owner and the collaborating partners must carry out the project in effective collaboration. See definition in the guide.
- The Project Owner and collaborating partners must be independent of each other. This means that one cannot have a controlling influence over the other. This applies both between the Project Owner and the collaborating partner, and between all the collaborating partners, and the subcontractors and the Project Owner(s) must also be independent of each other. By controlling influence, we mean majority ownership or other specific legal or factual circumstances that allow one actor to control the other. Read more about such dependencies here.
- One actor cannot have several roles in the project, for example as a collaborating partner and subcontractor.
- collaborating partners who are not research organisations cannot lead the project or major tasks.
- The project must have a steering group or reference group in which the collaborating partners are represented.
- The project must not be commissioned research.
- In the application, you must describe how the expertise built up in the project can benefit larger user groups.
What can you seek funding for?
You can apply for funding to cover actual costs necessary to carry out the project. The Project Owner must obtain information on costs from the partners in the project. These costs must be entered in the cost plan under the cost type to which they belong.
The following cost types should be used:
- Payroll and indirect expenses, which are costs related to researcher time (including research fellowship positions and the project manager's position) at the research organisations participating in the project. For doctoral scholarships, funding is limited to three full-time equivalents. For postdoctoral fellowships, funding is limited to a minimum of three years and a maximum of four years. See our website about post-doctoral research fellowship positions and doctoral research fellowship positions.
- Other operating expenses, which are costs for other activities necessary to carry out the project's R&D activities. Any purchases from subcontractors must be entered here. All expenses you enter as "other operating expenses" must be specified in the application.
- Equipment, which are costs that include operating and depreciation costs for scientific equipment and research infrastructure necessary to carry out the project
The cost type Procurement of R&D services cannot be used.
If doctoral and postdoctoral research fellows are included in the project and there are specific plans for them to stay abroad, this may be included in the application. The Research Council also has a separate call for proposals for research stays abroad for doctoral and post-doctoral research fellows. Here, the project manager can apply for funding for research stays abroad for research fellows who are part of the project during the project period. Please note that the separate call for proposals has a number of requirements for who can receive support for the stay abroad.
If there are specific plans for visiting researchers or stays abroad for researchers in the project, you may include these in the application. The rules for such stays and information about rates can be found on the budget information page (see link below).
You will find detailed and important information on the website about what to enter in the project budget.
Scope of funding
- The Research Council's funding for the project can be up to four times the Norwegian industry partners' cash contributions, both in total and on an annual basis.
- The minimum amount is stated at the top of this call. A possible maximum amount is described under the individual topics.
- Cash financing from foreign industry partners (including Norwegian-registered foreign enterprises) or public administration will not count as part of the cash financing requirement.
The Research Council does not award state aid under this call. This means that funding from the Research Council can only finance the research organisations' project costs.
We do not cover the costs of collaborating partners that are not research organisations, whether they are Norwegian or foreign. You must therefore keep these costs out of the budget tables. However, the activities that they will carry out, with associated costs, must be described in the project description, under section 3.2.
Costs of foreign partners
The Research Council's allocation may cover the costs of foreign research organisations. See Collaboration with organisations abroad.
Ethics
Give a brief description on how ethical issues will be dealt with, to ensure the panel that there is an appropriate plan for management of ethical issues. The responsibility for ensuring that the research ethics standard is followed lies with the individual researcher and research organisation.
The responsibility for ensuring that the research ethics standard is followed lies with the individual researcher and research institution (cf. Research Ethics Act). The panel's assessment and the Research Council's funding decision do not entail any research ethics approval.
See more information and guidance on the following website: Ethical standards in research.
Conditions for funding
- The funding to the research organisations goes to their non-economic activity in the form of independent research, and therefore does not constitute state aid. The Research Council assumes that the necessary accounting separation between the organisation's economic and non-economic activities is in place
- We require annual project accounting reports documenting incurred project costs and how they are financed. The Research Council's conditions for awarding and disbursing funding are set out in the General Terms and Conditions for R&D Projects.
If the project is approved, the following must be in place when you revise the application:
- The Project Owner must establish collaboration agreements with the partners in the project, both Norwegian and foreign. The collaboration agreements are intended to regulate mutual rights and obligations and ensure the integrity and independence of research. The collaboration agreements must also ensure that no collaborating undertaking receives indirect support from the Project Owner or partners. The cooperation agreement must therefore contain conditions that ensure that ESA's guidelines on state aid for R&D&I, section 28, are complied with.
- If the project has PhD and postdoctoral research fellows where the responsible higher education institution does not participate in the application, you must also have a collaboration agreement with the responsible/degree-conferring institution.
- The project manager and the Project Owner must have assessed and managed the consideration of research security in the project.
- Research organisations and entities in the public sector that receive grants (Project Owners and partners) must have action plans for gender equality (GEPs) available on their websites.
- The Research Council requires full and immediate open access for scientific articles, see Plan S - open access to publications.
- For all projects that handle data, the Project Owner must prepare a data management plan in connection with the revised application, where you will find more information about the requirements for data management plans in projects that receive funding from us.
- The Project Owner decides which archiving solution(s) will be used for storing research data that emerges from the project.
- For medical and health studies involving humans, the Research Council sets special requirements and guidelines for prospective registration of studies and publication of results.
Reporting and disbursement of funding
You must submit an annual project accounting report documenting the costs incurred and how they are financed.
We disburse the funding in arrears. You will receive more information about this if the project should be awarded funding from us.
All reporting must be done electronically.
Relevant thematic areas for this call
The topics in this call are grouped into the thematic areas below. The thematic texts contain special requirements and guidelines that will be emphasised in the assessment of the application.
Energy and transportation
Funding is available for projects that support long-term and sustainable development of the energy system, and that help ensure that we have good access to competitive renewable energy in the right place at the right time, and that we use energy efficiently.
Delimitations
The project must address a topic within environmentally friendly energy that is consistent with relevant topics for the subarea Energy and low emissions, as described in chapter 2.3 of the portfolio plan for Energy and Transport. This includes:
- the entire value chain for the production of electricity and heat from renewable energy sources such as hydro and wind power, solar, ocean and bioenergy, and geothermal energy
- different types of infrastructure for energy distribution, and their integration
- all forms of energy use that significantly affect energy systems in buildings, construction, built-up areas, transport, digital processes, as well as in the use and decarbonisation of industrial processes
- development of the entire value chain for hydrogen-based energy carriers, batteries and biofuels
- research on energy transition and impacts on society, climate and nature
There is a great need for research related to interaction and system integration across different areas, and the project may address the interaction between several of these topics.
It is possible to apply for both short-term projects on particularly relevant issues and broad, more long-term projects.
The recommended amount applied for from the Research Council is NOK 8–16 million.
It is not possible to use surplus funding from centre schemes (FME, SFI, etc.) as part of the cash financing for the project. Surplus funding means industrial funding that is included as part of the collaboration agreement for a research centre. Any letters of support from research centres will not be considered.
Relevance
When grading the application's relevance, we will place emphasis on whether the project will contribute significantly to at least one or more of the topics described above, in addition to whether the project:
- includes doctoral education (for long-term, large projects) and/or contributes to recruitment and education in the energy subjects at bachelor's and master's level
- has several financing partners, preferably from business sectors subject to competition, and where several of the partners contribute significant parts of the financing and have letters of support that show both financing and strategic anchoring
- will contribute to interaction between the different parts of the energy sector
- collaborates with relevant international research groups
- has a scope that is within the recommended amount applied for
To ensure good competence-building and recruitment to energy research, we encourage you to allow younger researchers to become project managers. Applications with a young project manager will not be considered weakened due to a lack of project management experience, provided that you combine this with a mentoring scheme and discuss this in section 3.1 of the project description.
Portfolio assessments
We will strive for a balanced project portfolio that covers the breadth of the areas described above and that contributes to the implementation of the R&D strategy Energi21 (see Relevant plans below).
We will strive for a good gender balance among project managers in our portfolio. This means that in otherwise equal circumstances, we will prioritise projects that contribute to this.
Funding is available for projects that involve basic and/or applied research on issues related to petroleum activities in open areas on the Norwegian continental shelf. For research questions related to safety in the Norwegian petroleum industry, the onshore facilities are also relevant.
Delimitations
Projects that are eligible for funding under this topic must fall under at least one of the following five areas:
- reduction of greenhouse gas emissions, energy efficiency and the environment
- subsurface understanding
- drilling, completion, intervention and permanent abandonment of wells (P&A)
- production, processing and transport
- major accidents and the working environment
In 2026, we will prioritise projects aimed at major accidents and the working environment, and at improving energy efficiency and reducing greenhouse gas emissions associated with petroleum activities on the Norwegian shelf. For applications with emission-reducing effects, you must account for what you envisage in terms of total emission reductions for the technology(s) that the project will develop, including a quantitative climate account. You must also describe the time perspective and framework conditions for implementing the knowledge/technology and see it in the context of the industry's new climate goals for 2030 and 2050.
All applications must clearly target the petroleum industry, and priority will only be given to projects where the technology is directly applied in the Norwegian petroleum activities and linked to the thematic priorities for petroleum set out in the portfolio plan for energy and transport. Applications that are primarily aimed at the renewable energy sector, including CCS, geothermal energy, offshore wind and hydrogen, cannot apply for the thematic area petroleum.
You must avoid activities that duplicate other, ongoing projects and centres. It is not possible to use surplus funding from centre schemes (FME, SFI or PETROSENTER) as part of the cash financing for the project. Surplus funding means industrial funding that is included as part of the collaboration agreement for a research centre. Any letters of support from research centres will not be considered.
The recommended amount applied for from the Research Council is NOK 8–16 million, to ensure that the majority of the projects are of a certain size.
Relevance
In addition to the general requirements and characteristics of the call, priority will be given to applications that:
- contributes significantly to at least one or more of the thematic areas described above
- includes research training of doctoral and/or postdoctoral research fellows, and which contributes to research-based teaching at master's level
- contains collaboration with another Norwegian research organisation in addition to the minimum requirement for participation from organisations in the business sector
- has concrete plans for international cooperation
- has industry partners where everyone is well integrated into the project and contributes significant funding
- has a scope that is within the recommended amount applied for
To ensure good competence-building and recruitment in petroleum research, we encourage you to let a younger researcher try the role of project manager. Applications with a young project manager will not be considered weakened due to a lack of project management experience, provided that you combine this with a mentoring scheme and discuss this in section 3.1 of the project description.
When we award a mark for the application's relevance, we will consider how well the above points have been met, in addition to the general requirements and characteristics of the call.
Portfolio assessments
We will strive for a balanced and comprehensive project portfolio that covers the breadth of the thematic areas described above and that contributes to the implementation of the portfolio plan for energy and transport and the R&D strategy OG21. Applications to this call that are linked to ongoing research centres or other ongoing projects must be clearly distinguished from these and represent a clear new contribution.
Relevant plans
Funding is available to build knowledge and expertise in CO2 management.
Delimitations
The maximum amount of funding is NOK 10 million.
You can apply for funding for the following research areas:
- new technology for CO2 capture from larger point sources of emissions
- removal of CO2 from the atmosphere. This includes technologies under the term Carbon Dioxide Removal (CDR), and includes CO2 capture from air (often referred to as direct air capture, DAC) and CO2 capture combined with biomass (often referred to as BECCS, Bio Energy with CO2 Capture and Storage).
- new expertise that closes knowledge gaps in CO2 transport
- projects that can provide safer and more cost-effective CO2 storage
- socio-economic and social science research on topics that can promote the implementation of CO2 management on a large scale. Pure social science projects must address topics that can realize CCS for land-based industry.
We do not allow for projects where CO2 is used to make products that result in CO2 ending up in the atmosphere again.
Applications must be within the topics described in CLIMIT's work programme.
Relevance
We will prioritise applications that:
- deal with solutions that can accelerate the development towards the green shift
- have industry partners who are well integrated into the project and contribute significant funding
- have a scope that is realistic to implement within the amount applied for
- support the objectives of the EU's SET-Plan.
- include the use of ECCSEL's research infrastructure
- have extensive interdisciplinary or multidisciplinary activities
- have a good gender balance
When we award a mark for the application's relevance, we will consider how well the above points have been met, in addition to the general requirements and characteristics of the call.
Portfolio assessments
We will strive for a balanced project portfolio that covers the breadth of the research areas described above, and that contributes to the implementation of CLIMIT's work programme and the R&D strategy Energi21 (see Relevant plans below).
For projects of approximately equal quality, we will prioritise projects in 2026 that have strong user participation and great potential for commercialisation.
If you want to see what we already have in the portfolio, go to the Project Databank. Here is a relevant link:
Practical information
Requirements for this funding scheme
You can change and submit the application several times until the application deadline. We recommend that you submit your application as soon as you have completed the application form and uploaded the required attachments. When the application deadline expires, it is the version of the application that was submitted most recently that we process.
- The application and all attachments must be written in English, except for the relevance attachment, which may be in Norwegian.
- All mandatory attachments must be included. The attachments must be in PDF format.
- The project must start between 1 October 2026 and 1 April 2027. Projects that have received a decision on allocation that do not start during this period, may lose their funding.
Mandatory attachments
- Project description of a maximum of 11 pages. You must use the template for 2026.
- CVs for the project manager and for the most important project participants, each of a maximum of four pages. You assess which project participants are the most important. Key project participants who are researchers can use the CV template called "Template for CV researchers". Other key project participants can use the CV template called "Template for CV".
- Letters of intent from all the collaborating partners. See sample letter of intent on our guidance page. The cash contribution from industry actors must be specified in the letter of intent. Cash contributions that are listed in the project budget, but not specified in the letter of intent, will not be included when we assess the application.
- Description of relevance of a maximum of one page. Uploaded as attachment type "Other".
You must use standard templates for all required attachments where available. The templates can be found at the bottom of the call.
All requirements in the call must be met. Applications that do not meet the above requirements or requirements relating to the Project Owner and requirements relating to collaboration and roles in the project will be rejected.
We will not consider attachments other than those specified above, or documents and websites linked to in the application. The system does not do any technical validation on the content of the attachments you upload, so make sure to upload the correct file for the correct attachment type.
Optional attachment
Feel free to attach proposals for up to three professionals (or academic communities) who you believe have the competence to assess the application, or a brief description of the expertise that you believe will be suitable for assessing it. We are not obliged to use the suggestions, but can use them if necessary. We encourage gender balance in the proposals.
All attachments must be submitted with the application. We do not accept attachments submitted after the application deadline unless we have requested additional documentation.
Excellence
• Scientific creativity and originality.
• Novelty and boldness of hypotheses or research questions.
• Potential for development of new knowledge beyond the current state of the art, including significant theoretical, methodological, experimental or empirical advancement.
The quality of the proposed R&D activities
• Quality of the research questions, hypotheses and project objectives, and the extent to which they are clearly and adequately specified.
• Credibility and appropriateness of the theoretical approach, research design and use of scientific methods. Appropriate consideration of interdisciplinary approaches.
• The extent to which appropriate consideration has been given to societal responsibility, ethical issues and gender dimensions in research content.
• The extent to which appropriate consideration has been given to the use of stakeholder/user knowledge.
Impact
• The extent to which the planned outputs of the project address important present and/or future scientific challenges.
• The extent to which the planned outputs are openly accessible to ensure reusability of the research outputs and enhance reproducibility.
• The extent to which the planned outputs of the project address important present and/or future challenges for the sector(s).
• The extent to which the competence developed and planned outputs of the project will provide the basis for value creation in Norwegian business and/or development of the public sector.
• The extent to which the planned outputs of the project address UN Sustainable Development Goals or other important present and/or future societal challenges.
• The extent to which the potential impacts are clearly formulated and plausible.
Communication and exploitation
• The extent to which the appropriate open science practices are implemented as an integral part of the proposed project to ensure open sharing and wide distribution of research outputs.
• Quality and scope of communication and engagement activities targeted towards relevant stakeholders/users.
• The extent to which the partners are involved in dissemination and utilisation of the project results.
Implementation
• The extent to which the project manager has relevant expertise and experience and demonstrated ability to perform high-quality research (as appropriate to the career stage).
• The degree of complementarity of the participants and the extent to which the project group has the necessary expertise needed to undertake the research effectively.
The quality of the project organisation and management
• Effectiveness of the project organisation, including the extent to which resources assigned to work packages are aligned with project objectives and deliverables.
• Appropriateness of the allocation of tasks, ensuring that all participants have a valid role and adequate resources in the project to fulfil that role.
• Appropriateness of the proposed management structures and governance.
• Appropriateness of the partners' contribution to the governance and execution of the project.
Relevance to the chosen topic
• The extent to which the project satisfies any other priorities in the text for the chosen topic.
Administrative procedures
We will assess the application as it has been submitted.
Once the application deadline has passed, we will first check that all formal requirements are met. Applications that do not satisfy the formal requirements will be rejected, and applications that fall outside the topic will be rejected without assessment by peer reviewers.
The Research Council may reject applications where the Project Owner or partner has materially breached its obligations in other projects funded by the Research Council in the two years prior to the submission of the application.
The application may be rejected if the project manager has been convicted of misconduct by the Common Commission on Research Integrity or the National Commission for the Investigation of Research Misconduct in the last two years prior to submitting the application.
Where the requirements are met, we will make the application, with all mandatory attachments, available in an online portal for experts who individually assess the criteria "excellence", "impact" and "implementation". The referees will then meet in thematic panels where they will reach a consensus assessment of the application for each of the three criteria.
If, according to the referee panel's assessment, the average mark awarded is 5.0 or higher, the application will also be assessed for the criterion "Relevance to the chosen topic" by the Research Council's administration.
The assessment of the four above criteria is summarised in an overall mark for the application. The Research Council's administration then creates ranking lists based on this grade.
Finally, it is the portfolio board that decides whether the applications will be awarded or rejected. Their decisions are based on the ranking lists and a holistic portfolio assessment. Under the individual topics in this call, the considerations taken by the portfolio boards will be stated.
The Research Council will fund projects that have a place on the road to a low-emission society in line with the Paris Agreement. In cases where two projects have received otherwise equal assessments, the portfolio board will prioritise the project that is most sustainable in terms of effects on climate, the environment and society.
The portfolio board plans to hold a decision meeting in June 2026. We will publish the results of the application processing after the meeting.
On the Research Council's website, you can read more about how we process Collaborative and Knowledge-building applications.
Messages at time of print 21 January 2026, 17:31 CET