Skip to content

SINTEF Blog Gå til forsiden

  • Energy
  • Ocean
  • Digital
  • Health
  • Industry
  • Climate and environment
  • Building
  • Society
  • EN
  • NO
Energy

NCCS Webinars – Innovation in FMEs

author
Rune Aarlien
Senior Project Manager
Published: 17. Oct 2017 | Last edited: 14. Apr 2025
1 min. reading
Comments (0)

The webinar will concern innovation and innovation management, and will have two parts. In the first part, Sigmund Størset will present main findings from his Master of Technology Management thesis, titled “Managing open innovation process in large university-industry research programmes”, which used FMEs as a case study. The second part will concern activities planned or underway in the NCCS Innovation and Technology Transfer task.

  • DATE: November 9, 2017
  • TIME: 10:00 – 11:00 AM (CET)
  • DURATION: 1.0 hrs incl. Q&A

Presenter: Sigmund Størset, Research Manager SINTEF Energy Research

The webinar is open to NCCS partners, only.


Best regards,
The NCCS Management Team

Questions?

Contact: Rune.Aarlien@sintef.no


  • Feel free to share this with colleagues in your own company.
  • If you are not already on the invitation list, send us an e-mail and ask to be added. You will then receive invitations to all NCCS webinars.
  • If you do not wish to receive these NCCS webinars invitations anymore, send us an e-mail and we will remove your name form the list.

NCCS – Norwegian CCS Research Centre


 

Comments

No comments yet. Be the first to comment!

Leave a comment Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

More about Energy

How much can energy-efficient voyage planning save? Evidence from 11 months of North Atlantic data

Author Image
Author Image
2 forfattere
Infographic showing the flow of thermal energy storage (TES) from surplus heat or cold to end users. On the left, red and blue thermometer icons represent surplus heat and cooling, accompanied by the text “Surplus heat or cold – Captured and stored for when it’s needed.” In the centre, a large panel titled “Thermal Energy Storage (TES)” presents three storage technologies. The top section, “Sensible TES,” shows a container with a thermometer and the text “Stores heat in one single phase.” The middle section, “Latent TES,” shows a water droplet and snowflake connected by circular arrows, with the text “Stores heat through phase change.” The bottom section, “Thermochemical TES,” shows two connected coloured circles that separate and reconnect, illustrating a reversible reaction, with the text “Stores heat through reversible reactions.” A large pale arrow-shaped wedge points from the TES panel toward the right side of the figure. On the right, three application areas are shown in separate boxes with icons: industrial processes, buildings, and data centres. The layout conveys that surplus heat or cold can be stored using sensible, latent, or thermochemical TES technologies and later supplied to industrial facilities, buildings, and data centres.

Thermal energy storage is already commercial  

Jorge Salgado Beceiro
Jorge Salgado Beceiro
Research Manager

Burning ammonia cleanly: How timing changes everything 

Author Image
Author Image
2 forfattere

Technology for a better society

  • About this blog
  • How to write a science blog
  • Sign up for our newsletter
  • News from NTNU and SINTEF
  • Facebook
Gå til SINTEF.no
SINTEF logo
© 2026 SINTEF Foundation
Privacy Editorial Press contacts Website by Headspin