Ask our AI-chatbot
Planned

Industrial PhD Scheme – Doctoral Projects in Industry 2026

Utlysningen vil åpne for søknader 21. januar 2026.

Important dates

09 Jan 2026

Applicant webinar for Industrial PhD 2026

10 Aug 2026

Earliest permitted project start

04 Jan 2027

Latest permitted project start

03 Jan 2031

Latest permitted project completion date

Important dates

Purpose

The purpose of the Industrial PhD scheme is to strengthen research-based innovation and contribute to long-term competence building in Norwegian business and industry through the recruitment of doctoral candidates in companies. 

At the same time, the scheme will contribute to closer collaboration between the business sector and research communities, so that research-based knowledge can be used more easily.

About the call for proposals

An Industrial PhD project is a collaborative project between a Project Owner company and a degree-conferring institution. The doctoral project must be based on a research question that is relevant to the company, and it must be planned and carried out in close collaboration between the company and the degree-conferring institution. Other actors may be partners in the project under certain conditions. Read more about this under "Cooperation with other actors". 

This call has ongoing application reception and processing from the time the call opens. As the projects are approved, we will update the call with information about which budget funds are still available. Read more about this under "Treatment procedure". 

The industrial PhD scheme is not a competitive arena. This means that funding is awarded on an ongoing basis to applications that meet all the criteria set out in the call, as long as funding is available. 

Each company (by organisation number) can receive a maximum of one allocation per call. 

In this call for proposals, we support projects starting within the academic year 2026/27. Projects can start at the start of the autumn semester on 10 August 2026 at the earliest, and no later than the start of the spring semester on 4 January 2027. 

Topics for the call 

Funding is available for 40 Industrial PhD projects without thematic guidelines in this year's call. In addition, earmarked funds have been set aside to finance up to 13 additional projects if they satisfy special guidelines. Companies that apply for the earmarked funds will also be assessed against the thematically free funds. 

Applications directed against the earmarked funds will be assessed against the specific guidelines stated in the points below. 

The earmarked funds are within the following thematic areas: 

  • Deep technologies: We will fund doctoral projects in technology-based or technology-intensive companies in need of increased expertise in deep tech, including artificial intelligence (AI), biotechnology, nanotechnology, quantum technology and neurotechnology. These are projects that will ensure that companies can harness the power of groundbreaking technologies to strengthen the prerequisites for radical innovation, major societal changes, business development and sustainable growth in a digital and uncertain age.   
  • Circular economy: We can fund projects that explore opportunities and find solutions for circular economy in the business sector. The projects may be aimed at the objectives of the "Social Mission for Circular Economy" (regjeringen.no), where the main goal is that "by 2035, Norway shall have achieved a significant increase in reuse, repairs and sharing of scarce resources". Relevant topics may include, for example, challenges, measures and solutions for companies to introduce circular business models.  

Maritime research: We can fund Industrial PhD projects that are relevant to maritime research as described in the maritime part of the Energy and Transport Portfolio.  

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?

The Project Owner must be registered in the Norwegian Register of Business Enterprises and have economic activity in Norway. By economic activity, we mean offering goods or services in a market. This means that the Project Owner must either be a private company, or a public enterprise that conducts activities of an industrial or commercial nature. In the rest of the call, we use the collective term "company". 

At the time of application, the company must have at least two full-time employees. At the start of the doctoral project, the company must have at least three full-time employees, including the doctoral candidate. 

Sole proprietorships cannot be Project Owners, but they can be partners. 

Organisations that are approved by the Research Council as a research organisation are not eligible to apply for Industrial PhDs, see the Research Council's list of approved research organisations. This also includes health trusts and technology transfer offices (TTOs).

Who can participate in the project?

The Project Owner must carry out the doctoral project in collaboration with a Norwegian or foreign degree-conferring institution (university or university college). 

The Research Council sets the following requirements for the Project Owner, company and degree-conferring institution: 

Requirements relating to the Project Owner company 

  • The doctoral project must be relevant to the company's R&D needs 
  • The Project Owner must have the financial ability to implement the project and ensure funding for the project throughout the project period, including in the event of any delays. 
  • The project will be carried out in either three or four full calendar years. In three-year projects, the candidate works 100 percent on the doctoral project. In four-year projects, the candidate works at least 75 per cent of the time on the doctoral project, and 25 per cent of the time on other tasks. 
  • The candidate must be employed by the Project Owner company throughout the project period. The candidate must be employed in a 100 per cent position for three years for three-year projects, and in at least a 75 per cent position for four years for four-year projects.  The latest allowed hire date is the project's start date. 
  • The employment relationship must take into account that there may be delays. The Research Council assumes that the candidate's employment and working conditions are in line with Norwegian legislation. 
  • The Project Owner must appoint an internal mentor in the project and set aside sufficient time and resources for the doctoral project to be carried out. The role of mentor in the company must be filled by a person with relevant expertise for the project's subject matter, but does not need to have a doctorate. An internal mentor can be hired from another actor if the company does not have relevant expertise. 

Requirements for the doctoral candidate 

  • The candidate must be designated at the time of application. You cannot apply for funding for projects without a named candidate. It is also not possible to change candidates along the way. 
  • The candidate must have an approved master's degree at the time of application. 
  • The Research Council only provides funding for projects with candidates who do not already have a doctoral degree. 
  • The scheme does not support the completion of doctoral degrees. 

Requirements relating to degree-conferring institutions 

  • The degree-conferring institution is responsible for ensuring that the doctoral project, and thereby the doctoral degree to be defended at the institution, meets the same requirements for scientific level as the institution's other doctoral degrees, and follows the institution's regulations for doctoral education with regard to admission, completion and assessment. The Research Council does not carry out any scientific assessment and quality assurance of the project, but we assume that this is taken care of by the degree-conferring institution. 
  • The process of admission to a doctoral programme must have been initiated at the time of application. Documentation of final admission will be sent if the application is approved. The Research Council will not enter into a contract with the Project Owner until confirmation of final admission has been received. 
  • To ensure the necessary independence and integrity in the research, we require that the main supervisor and any other co-supervisors from the degree-conferring institution do not have financial interests or ownership interests in the applicant company, in accordance with the university's guidelines for objectivity and impartiality. 
  • If the degree-conferring institution is a foreign institution, the Project Owner must document that the degree awarded by the foreign institution is on a par with a doctoral degree awarded at a Norwegian university. 

Requirements for collaboration and organisation of the project 

  • The Project Owner, the company and the degree-conferring institution must jointly offer the candidate a satisfactory academic environment and good support for carrying out the doctoral project. 
    • You must conduct two progress meetings per year. These meetings must include the candidate, the project manager and/or the administrative manager and internal mentor at the Project Owner company and the main supervisor at the degree-conferring institution. The meetings will help to evaluate the project's development and address any challenges at an early stage, as well as ensure continuous communication with the Research Council about the project's progress. Minutes of meetings must be sent to the Research Council on request. 
  • The candidate must spend at least one year at the degree-conferring institution and at least one year at the Project Owner company. This also applies if the degree-conferring institution is outside Norway. The stay does not have to be continuous, but can be divided into several shorter stays spread over the project period. 

Requirements for the collaboration agreement 

  • The Project Owner, company and degree-conferring institution must enter into a written collaboration agreement that complies with our general terms and conditions
  • The Industrial PhD scheme sets the following requirements for the collaboration agreement: 
  • The agreement must be valid throughout the project period. The agreement period must be specified in the agreement document. 
  • The distribution of results and questions about intellectual property rights must be clarified. The parties must regulate the ownership and rights of use of the project results when several parties have produced the result jointly. Ownership and rights of use shall be regulated so that enterprises participating in the consortium do not receive indirect support from participating research institutions. The regulation of ownership and right of use must therefore be in line with section 29 of the ESA's guidelines on aid for research, development and innovation.  
  • The mentor from the Project Owner company and the supervisor from the degree-conferring institution must be specified with name, role and employer. 
  • The agreement shall not prevent the candidate from publishing the results and defending their thesis on the basis of them. This must be specified in the agreement. 
  • Requirements for the candidate's work obligation must be clarified. This can also be part of a separate employment contract between the candidate and the company. In four-year projects, it must be specified where the research fellow's work duties are to be performed. 
  • Funding and distribution of costs among each partner in the doctoral project must be stated. 

Read more about collaboration agreements on the Research Council's website.  

Collaboration with other actors 

An industrial PhD is a policy instrument that is basically aimed at individual companies in collaboration with a degree-conferring institution. However, the scheme also allows several actors to join forces on an Industrial PhD project, provided that the collaboration is in accordance with the requirements of the collaboration agreement (see above). In an Industrial PhD project where several companies are involved as partners, the following requirements must be met: 

  • The Project Owner's share of the project can be distributed among several partners, but the Project Owner must contribute the largest share. 
  • A binding collaboration agreement must be entered into between the Project Owner, the company and the partners in the project. The agreement must clarify all relevant matters, including intellectual property rights (IPR), distribution of results and financial conditions. The Research Council requires that a joint agreement be entered into if there are several partners in addition to the Project Owner and the degree-conferring institution in the project. 
  • The Project Owner must be able to demonstrate a plan for how the project can be completed in the event that partners withdraw during the project. 

What can you seek funding for?

You can apply for funding to cover the actual costs necessary to carry out the doctoral project. These costs must be entered in the cost plan under the cost type to which they belong. Please note that the project ends after the thesis has been submitted for the first time. 

The Research Council encourages applicants to consult the company's payroll or finance department during the preparation of the budget. The costs at the degree-conferring institution must be collected from the institution's finance department and entered in the total budget. 

All project costs must be budgeted in accordance with the Research Council's guidelines for budgeting. More information about which costs can be covered can be found on our website under What to enter in the project budget.  

We require that the costs be allocated to the following types of costs in the application: 

  • Payroll and indirect expenses: This is where salary and personnel costs for personnel in the company, such as candidates and internal mentors, and salary and personnel costs at the degree-conferring institution are entered. The costs must be calculated on the basis of hourly rates per person participating in the project. The calculation basis you use, i.e. which costs you include in the hourly rate, must be described in the application in the specification field under the budget tables. There are different guidelines for calculating hourly rates for people in the company and at degree-conferring institutions. Please read the guidelines and follow the examples of calculating hourly costs and indirect costs:  
  • Procurement of R&D services: These are costs for the procurement of R&D services such as laboratory activities, analyses, etc. from an R&D supplier that is not a partner in the project. https://www.forskningsradet.no/finansiering/hvordan-skrive-soknad/budsjett/ 
  • Equipment: Please note that there are restrictions on the equipment costs that can be included in the budget. It is therefore important that you read the guidelines carefully. https://www.forskningsradet.no/finansiering/hvordan-skrive-soknad/budsjett/   
  • Other operating expenses: These are costs for literature purchases, conference trips, participation in research schools, operating costs for laboratory experiments, etc. See guidelines for other operating costs.   

Calculation of the support 

The table below shows the maximum amount of funding from the Research Council for Industrial PhD projects per year and month. You calculate the support per month from the start date: 

    

2026 

2027 

2028 

2029 

2030 

2031 

3-year projects 

715 000 

742 000 

768 000 

795 000 

823 000 

852 000 

Support per month 

60 000 

62 000 

64 000 

66 000 

69 000 

71 000 

    

    

    

    

    

    

    

4-year projects 

536 000 

556 000 

576 000 

596 000 

617 000 

639 000 

Support per month 

45 000 

46 000 

48 000 

50 000 

51 000 

53 000 

The support is adjusted in line with actual accounted costs. Funding may not exceed 50 per cent of the total approved project costs. This means that if the reported costs are lower than budgeted, the Research Council's disbursement will be reduced so that it does not amount to more than 50 per cent of the project costs. 

Prerequisites for the award of funding 

The Paris Agreement and the low-emission society 

It is a general principle that projects that receive funding from the Research Council must have a place on the road to achieving Norway's commitments under the Paris Agreement and the low-emission society in 2050. Read more here: The Government's climate status and plan - regjeringen.no 

State aid 

This call constitutes an aid scheme that must be notified to the EFTA Surveillance Authority (ESA) and has the reference: GBER 86/2024/R&D&I. 

The aid under the scheme is awarded in accordance with Article 25 of the Block Exemption Regulation (Commission Regulation (EU) No 651/2014). In addition, the general conditions in Chapter I of the Regulation must be met. Read more about state aid here: Article 25: Support for research and development projects.  

The Industrial PhD scheme only supports project activities that fall within the definition of basic research and industrial research in the state aid rules (read about the legal basis for state aid from the Research Council here). 

Aid may not be granted to undertakings that have not complied with the requirements for repayment following a previous decision by the ESA/EU Commission declaring the aid illegal and incompatible with the internal market. Nor may aid be granted to undertakings in difficulty within the meaning of EEA law

Ethics 

The Research Council requires a high standard of research ethics in the projects we fund, and ethics are included in our assessment criteria. A plan must be in place to deal with the most important ethical dilemmas in the project. The responsibility for compliance with the research ethics standard lies with the individual researcher and research organisation (cf. the Act on the Organisation of Research Ethics Work).      

The Research Council's decision on the award therefore does not entail any approval of research ethics. 

Can we combine an Industrial PhD project with SkatteFUNN? 

The Industrial PhD scheme can be considered for use in combination with SkatteFUNN. The prerequisite is that the company applies for the Industrial PhD scheme first, and then considers the possibility of applying for SkatteFUNN for parts of the same project, if the Industrial PhD project is granted. Contact the Research Council's advisers for SkatteFUNN for more information: Contact SkatteFUNN  

Other prerequisites 

In addition, you must be aware of the following if you should receive an award from us: 

Participation in research schools and support for stays abroad 

Support for stays abroad 

Companies that receive support through the Industrial PhD Scheme can also apply for support for stays abroad for their doctoral candidate if the degree-conferring institution is Norwegian. See separate call for proposals for research stays abroad for doctoral and post-doctoral research fellows

Research Schools 

The research schools will raise the quality and relevance of doctoral education through collaboration in networks. We recommend all candidates to consider the possibility of participating in a graduate school. Costs for participation can be included in the budget. See the list of national research schools here: Scheme for National Researcher Schools 

Relevant thematic areas for this call

Innovation

Artificial intelligenceQuantum technologyBiotechnologyNanotechnology NeurotechnologyCircular economyMaritime sectorTrade and industry throughout the country

Practical information

Requirements for this funding scheme

The application must be created and submitted via My RCN Web. The application and all attachments must be written in Norwegian or English. All attachments must be in PDF format and uploaded as attachments in the application form. You will find all attachment templates at the bottom of the call. 

This call has ongoing application reception and processing from the time the call opens.  Please note that you can only submit the application once. If you submit the application and shortly afterwards see that it needs to be changed, you must create a new application, e.g. as a copy of the one you have already submitted. Then you must withdraw the first application by sending an e-mail about this. The new application will be placed in a new, later position in the order of processing. 

The application form 

  • The formal roles in the project, i.e. the administrative manager and the project manager, must be held by employees of the Project Owner company and cannot be filled by the PhD candidate. 
    • The person responsible for administration must have the right to sign for the company and must be able to commit the company in an Industrial PhD project. The administrative officer must approve the application before it is submitted and must sign, among other things, the contract and reports during the project period. 
    • The project manager in the company has reporting responsibility to the Research Council and is the primary contact person for the Industrial PhD project. The project manager is also responsible for the project's progress. 
  • The degree-conferring institution, and any other companies or institutions that are part of an actual collaboration, must be listed under "Partners and R&D providers" in the application form. 
  • The degree-conferring institution and any partners must be registered as "funding and performing". The Project Owner company and the Research Council must not be listed as partners. 
  • The main activities during the project period must be entered and categorised as basic research or industrial research. One to two main activities are sufficient. 
  • Milestones during the project period must include: 
    • Compulsory and elective courses at degree-conferring institutions and possibly other universities/university colleges 
    • progress meetings at least once per semester 
    • Midway evaluation at degree-conferring institution 
    • Milestones for the planned articles 
    • The submission of the thesis must be the project's final milestone and the end date for the project. We consider the submission of the thesis to be the conclusion of the project. We do not wait for the public defence as this may take longer. 
  • In the specification field of the cost plan, all cost types must be specified. You must describe how you have arrived at the hourly rate for the project staff, and how many hours per year you have calculated per project employee. 
  • If you have used the maximum hourly rate (NOK 1100), you must justify this. The number of hours for the candidate may not exceed 1850 per year in 3-year projects and 1389 per year in 4-year projects. See an example of the calculated hourly rate on the Research Council's website, here: Calculating payroll and indirect expenses. Also specify the costs of the degree-conferring institution, i.e. state the amount for supervision and the amount for indirect costs (e.g. office). Also, specify any "Other operating costs". 

Attachments to the application 

All mandatory attachments must follow the templates in this year's call. You will find all the attachment templates at the bottom of the call. All attachments must be in PDF format. 

Parts of our application processing are digitized. It is therefore important that you keep the header in your documents. 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. 

Applications that do not meet the criteria for applying will be rejected. 

Applications that have not attached all mandatory attachments will be rejected. 

We will not consider attachments other than those specified above, or documents and websites linked to in the application. 

Mandatory attachments 

  1. Project description of a maximum of 10 A4 pages (use the standard template that you can find below) 
  2. Information about the applicant and partners (use the standard template found below) 
  3. Confirmation of participation in a doctoral project (to be uploaded under the attachment type "Other". Use the standard template that you can find below) 
  4. CV for the candidate: Only the candidate's CV should be uploaded (use the standard template for CV that you can find below) 
  5. Declaration form for undertaking (to be uploaded under the attachment type "Other") (use the standard template that you will find below) 

Administrative procedures

This call will be received and processed on an ongoing basis from the opening of this call, and applications will be processed administratively by the Research Council. Applications are processed on an ongoing basis in the order in which they are received, and in regular decision meetings, until there are no longer any funds left. If the funds are used up, the call will be updated with information that the call is closed. Applications that are received after the budget has been used up, but before the call closes, will be rejected without further processing. 

Within twelve weeks of the application deadline, the company will receive feedback on either the grant or rejection via email. Reservations are made for a possible extension of the processing time during periods of holiday and increased demand. Responses will be communicated via My RCN RCN Network to the project manager and administrative manager. 

The Research Council may reject applications where the Project Owner or partner has materially breached its obligations in other projects supported by the Research Council over the past two years. 

The application may be rejected if the project manager has been appointed to the Joint Integrity Committee or the Investigation Committee in the last two years prior to the submission of the application. 

If the application is conditionally approved, the applicant will receive a letter containing a request for additional information and a revision of the application. In the revised application, the applicant will be asked to write a popular science summary of the project, prepare a data management plan, and any other clarifications or corrections related to the application. The deadline for submitting a revised application is usually two weeks. If necessary, the applicant can request an extended deadline. 

Once the requested additional information and application revisions have been approved, we will post a contract on My RCN Web. The Research Council will not enter into a contract with the Project Owner until confirmation of the candidate's final admission to the doctoral programme has been received. A signed collaboration agreement with the degree-conferring institution and any other partners must be uploaded as an attachment to the contract. There is a three-month deadline from the date of publication to accept the contract. The contract is valid after we have approved the submitted contract and attachment. 

Please note that all project activity carried out before the contract with the Research Council has been signed is at the project partners' own risk. 

The Research Council's general terms and conditions for R&D projects apply to all projects awarded under the scheme. See more on our website: This is what the contract involves.     

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 your application is approved.  

Messages at time of print 19 January 2026, 17:18 CET

No global messages displayed at time of print.
{ }