Demonstration Project for the Industrial Sector 2022
Download the call
Download templates
- Mal for prosjektbeskrivelse - Demonstrasjonsprosjekter i næringslivet 2022.docx
- Template for Project Description - Demonstration Project for the Industrial Sector 2022.docx
- Mal for partneropplysninger - Demonstrasjonsprosjekter i næringslivet 2022.docx
- Template for Information about Applicant and Partner Companies - Demonstration Project for the Industrial Sector 2022.docx
- Template for CV - Demonstration Project for the Industrial Sector 2022.docx
Important dates
09 Mar 2022
Last submission deadline, first application period (midnight)
JUNE 2022
Decision, first application period
01 Jul 2022
Earliest possible project start-up after the first application period
01 Jul 2022
Tidligste tillatte prosjektstart
14 Sep 2022
Last submission deadline, second application period (midnight)
DECEMBER 2022
Decision, second application period
01 Jan 2023
Earliest possible project start-up after the second application period
Important dates
Purpose
A Demonstration Project for the Industrial Sector should strengthen companies’ own efforts to demonstrate new technology for applications with major socio-economic benefits. Projects are to ensure expertise, job creation, value creation and a competitive industrial sector.
About the call for proposals
Demonstration Project for the Industrial Sector 2022 covers topics relating to the Maritime industry (green shipping), Petroleum, and Land-based food, the environment and bioresources.
Funding will be awarded to projects that promote collaboration to ensure that new innovations are developed and taken into use – whether they are products, services or processes – and that have a need for pilot testing and demonstration of new technology for use nationally or to sell in international markets.
We expect you to carry out a significant part of the work on developing the technology in Norway, thereby ensuring Norwegian value creation and jobs. However, the pilot testing activities themselves may be conducted abroad.
Industrial projects that require more extensive research activity may be more relevant to the call Innovation Project for the Industrial Sector 2022.
You may submit your grant application at any time, up to and including 14 September 2022, 23:59 CEST. We process applications twice a year. Read more under the section ‘Expected funding decision’ (under ‘Administrative procedures’ towards the end of the call).
This call for proposals constitutes a funding scheme that is notified to the EFTA Surveillance Authority (ESA), and must be practised in compliance with the EEA state aid rules. Read more about state aid under the section ‘Conditions for funding’.
The Norwegian-language call for proposals is the legally binding version.
We will provide three months’ notification of any significant revisions to the call.
Who is eligible to apply?
This call is open to companies that have been issued an enterprise number under the Norwegian Register of Business Enterprises and that carry out economic activity in Norway. The applicant must either be a private company or a public enterprise that carries out activities of an industrial or business nature. We will use the collective term ‘company’ in the rest of the call for proposals.
Requirements apply for collaboration with other companies/actors in the value chain. You can read more about this in the section ‘Relevant thematic areas’ below.
Sole proprietorships and research organisations are not eligible to serve as a formal applicant.
Who can participate in the project?
Requirements relating to the Project Owner
The Project Owner must secure funding for the project (over and above the Research Council’s funding) and make provisions for utilisation of the project results in the company.
Requirements relating to partners
- The Project Owner must carry out the project in collaboration with at least one other company/actor in the value chain. Requirements and expectations of the collaboration are described in more detail under the topic you select for your grant application. The partners must normally contribute financial and scientific commitments to the project. Read more about project partners and R&D providers here. All partners and R&D providers must be registered in the grant application form.
- Partners must also fulfil the criteria listed under the section ‘Who is eligible to apply?’ to be able to participate in the project and receive funding. Partners must be involved in what is known as an effective collaboration with the Project Owner, which entails sharing both the risk associated with the project and the results it generates. Partners whose project costs are covered in part by Research Council funding are recipients of state aid.
- Norwegian and foreign expert environments and research organisations may participate in the project as R&D providers with responsibility for performing R&D work on assignment for the partner companies. R&D providers may not contribute to project funding and in general have no rights to the project results. They deliver on assignment and should receive the market price for their work. If they are nonetheless to maintain the rights to results, this should be reflected in the assignment’s pricing.
- Other international and public sector bodies may participate in the project, but they must not be entered as partners in the application form. This type of collaboration can be described under ‘Other collaboration’ under section 3.3. of the project description.
- The Project Owner or one of the partners may not be in an interdependent relationship with any of the R&D providers in the project, e.g., where both entities are part of the same corporation. The ‘arm’s length principle’ must be observed when engaging R&D providers.
- The Project Owner and partners participating in the project that are interdependent will be considered as one entity and as a single recipient of funding in accordance with the state aid rules.
- The application with relevant partners and R&D providers at the time the application is submitted forms the basis and is a stringent condition for funding. Changes made to the composition of a project before a contract has been entered into may result in the Research Council withdrawing its offer of funding.
Typical characteristics of a funded project
- Demonstration Projects build on a specific innovation produced by the companies participating in the project. The innovation can be in the form of a new product, service or production process, or a new means of delivering products and services. The innovation may also entail significant improvements in or new characteristics of existing products, processes or services.
- The companies depend on R&D activities to demonstrate and verify the innovation in order to successfully introduce their product on the market and move forward with commercialisation. R&D activities primarily concern experimental development, as defined in the state aid rules.
- You can demonstrate that the project will have a likely and significant positive impact for one or more sustainable development goals. We expect the project to have a positive impact without causing harm to other areas. Examples include emission reductions, climate adaptation, resource efficiency, well-functioning ecosystems or social/societal improvements.
- The project partners have defined tasks and a clear role in the project’s implementation.
- Demonstration and qualification activities are to be carried out under realistic conditions. The project description must include a clear plan for these activities.
- The scope and risk profile of the project is such that the companies would not be able to carry out the project without public funding. This means that support from the Research Council will be essential to reducing risk sufficiently for the participants to implement the necessary R&D activities. Project funding should also be crucial to obtaining private investment in the company for the development and realisation of the innovation.
- The project must incorporate clear targets and a concrete plan for carrying out the project and for utilising the results.
What can you seek funding for?
Parts of the partner companies’ costs pertaining to R&D activities under the project qualify for funding. This encompasses both a company’s own expenses for performing R&D activities itself and costs for procurement of R&D services
You will find detailed information about what to enter in the project budget here.
The Research Council does not provide funding for operational business activities including activities associated with the commercial exploitation of the R&D results, such as protection of intellectual property rights, market surveys and marketing. Nor is funding provided for costs that will not be recorded in the Project Owner or partners’ official accounts, such as own unpaid work effort. Nor are commercial rates for infrastructure owned by a partner or equipment/datasets donated to the project free of charge approved project costs and should not be included in the budget tables in the grant application form.
Scope of funding
The minimum amount of funding that may be sought is NOK 1 million and the maximum is NOK 16 million. The limits to the amount of funding that can be granted vary somewhat between the different thematic areas. See the section ‘Relevant thematic areas’ below for more details. The projects may last from one to three years.
The project activities are defined under the category ‘Experimental development’. Effective collaboration does not qualify for additional funding. The aid intensity in such cases varies from 25 per cent to maximum 45 per cent depending on the size of the company as defined in the state aid rules.
Type of company/type of activity |
Experimental development |
Small business |
45 % |
Medium-sized business |
35 % |
Large business |
25 % |
Please note that the aid intensity is calculated for each partner and their specific costs in the project rather than the project’s overall costs. The final grant amount for applications awarded funding will be determined in conjunction with contract negotiations.
Conditions for funding
This call for proposals constitutes a funding scheme that is notified to the EFTA Surveillance Authority (ESA).
Funding awarded under this scheme is granted in accordance with Article 25 of the General Block Exemption Regulation for state aid (Commission Regulation (EU) No 651/2014 of 17 June 2014). The general terms and conditions in Chapter I of the Regulation must also be satisfied. See the consolidated version of the General Block Exemption Regulation for state aid (page opens in a new window). This funding scheme must be practised in compliance with the EEA state aid rules. Conditions and concepts are to be interpreted in keeping with corresponding conditions and concepts in the state aid rules. In the event of conflict between the text of the call and the state aid rules, the latter will have precedence. The text of the call may be adjusted for the same reason.
State aid may not be given to an undertaking that is subject to an outstanding recovery order following a formal decision by the EFTA Surveillance Authority or the European Commission stating that state aid received is illegal and incompatible with the internal market. Nor can the Research Council award state aid to an enterprise that is defined as an undertaking in difficulty under the state aid rules, unless the undertaking was not in difficulty as of 31 December 2019, but became an undertaking in difficulty in the period 1 January 2020– 31December 2021. It may in such case receive funding.
The call for proposals has been approved as an aid scheme by the EFTA Surveillance Authority (ESA) with the reference: GBER 64/2022/R&D&I.
If your project is granted funding, you will have to revise the application. The revised application must incorporate updated and supplementary information about the project and participating partners, including documentation of implementation capacity and own funding. The participating companies must also submit a declaration confirming that they are qualified to receive state aid.
If your application is awarded funding, you should also note that:
- The project must commence no later than six months after the awarded grant was announced. Projects approved for funding that have not started within this date may lose their grant.
- You must submit accounting reports annually documenting incurred project costs and their financing.
- Other public funding allocated to the project, or to activities under the project, will affect the amount of funding that the Research Council can provide.
- If the Research Council allocates your project EUR 500,000 or more, this will be listed in a public registry.
- You must inform any partners listed on the stock exchange or that have applied to be admitted to trading as quickly as possible to give them an opportunity to assess whether the allocation of funding is sensitive inside information.
The Research Council’s requirements relating to allocations can be found in our General Terms and Conditions for R&D Projects on the page ‘What the contract involves’.
Relevant thematic areas for this call
In the grant application form, you must select the thematic area and topic that are most relevant to your project.
Petroleum
Funding will go to projects that encompass issues relating to petroleum activities in open areas on the Norwegian continental shelf. For issues related to safety, land-based facilities may also be relevant.
We will provide funding for projects concerning the following five thematic priorities:
- reducing greenhouse gases, energy efficiency and the environment;
- subsurface understanding;
- drilling, completion, intervention and permanent plug and abandonment of wells (P&A);
- production, processing and transport;
- major accidents and the work environment.
For more information about priorities for this thematic area, please see the portfolio plan below. Applications that do not fall within one of these five thematic areas will be rejected. Particular priority will be given to projects that seek to improve energy efficiency and reduce greenhouse gas emissions on the Norwegian continental shelf.
Improving energy efficiency and reducing greenhouse gas emissions on the Norwegian continental shelf
In 2022, we want to allocate a minimum of NOK 35 million to projects targeting ‘Improving energy efficiency and reducing greenhouse gas emissions related to petroleum activities on the Norwegian continental shelf’. This priority applies across the calls for applications under Knowledge-building Project for Industry, Innovation Project for the Industrial Sector, Demonstration Project for the Industrial Sector (this call) and Collaborative Project to meet Societal and Industry-related Challenges.
Applicants must give an account of the estimated total emission reduction for the technology/technologies the proposed project has targeted for development. You must also include a description of the time perspective and framework conditions for implementing the knowledge/technology, viewed in connection with the industry’s new climate targets for 2030 and 2050.
Plug and abandonment of wells (P&A)
If any applications are found to be of equal quality, we will prioritise projects relating to cost-efficient abandonment of wells. These funds are not earmarked, and the number of projects awarded funding will therefore depend on the volume and quality of applications.
The UN Sustainable Development Goals
Emphasis is placed on how well you specify the project’s contribution to achieving one or more of the UN Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs). In the following, we have described the SDGs that we believe to be relevant to the different thematic areas, but you must assess how your project specifically can contribute.
Sustainable management of petroleum resources rests on the sector achieving the climate goals set for the industry, and the portfolio includes the transition towards growing ocean-based industries, such as offshore wind power and the production of blue hydrogen combined with CCS. The following SDGs may be relevant:
SDG 7: Ensuring access to affordable, reliable, sustainable and modern energy for all and SDG 13: Climate action. SDG 8: Promoting sustained, inclusive and sustainable economic growth, full and productive employment and decent work for all, will mainly be relevant to projects concerning health, the working environment and safety. SDG 12: Ensuring sustainable consumption and production patterns and SDG 14: Conserving and sustainably using the oceans, seas and marine resources for sustainable development. Applications for this call could also be relevant to SDG 9: Industry, innovation and infrastructure.
Requirements relating to collaboration and roles in petroleum
For projects targeting the topic ‘Petroleum’, the Project Owner must carry out the project through effective collaboration with companies that are the end user(s) of the technology. For the petroleum sector, this will normally be oil companies, but relevant end users also include shipping companies, suppliers or other petroleum industry actors.
Assessment of relevance
When a mark is awarded for the application’s relevance, we will assess how well the project satisfies the requirements and guidelines set out in the call (see the assessment criteria ‘Relevance to the call for proposals’).
Under the topic Petroleum, the thematic and budgetary guidelines entail an assessment of how well the points listed above are met. We will also consider whether the project:
- is mature enough for early start-up and implementation and will secure jobs, expertise and value creation for the Norwegian petroleum industry;
- addresses challenges for which there are not currently any solutions available on the market. We will not prioritise the further development of tried and tested technology;
- entails collaboration of a significant measure, and not merely pro forma.
Budget, duration and funding amount
Roughly NOK 90 million has been set aside for projects relating to ‘Petroleum’ in 2022.
The projects may have a duration of between 1 and 3 years, and receive NOK 1–16 million in funding from the Research Council.
Contacts
Reducing greenhouse gases, energy efficiency and the environment
Subsurface understanding
Drilling, completion, intervention and P&A
Other relevant calls with the same topic
Oceans
In this context, maritime industries include: the shipping industry, the shipbuilding industry, service and equipment suppliers for all types of ships and vessels designed to utilise the ocean space, including vessels and maritime technology used in other ocean industries.
Funding is available for demonstration projects that help to increase value creation in the maritime industry.
The topic targets one of the priority areas in maritime and offshore operations, namely climate and environmentally friendly maritime operations/green shipping.
The projects awarded funding should facilitate emissions reduction from maritime transport and contribute to the maritime sector’s green transition. Applicants must give an account of the estimated total emission reduction for the technology/technologies the proposed project has targeted for development. The grant application must also include a description of the time perspective and framework conditions for implementing the knowledge and/or technology in relation to the industry’s climate targets for 2030 and 2050. The solutions must be scalable for industry and form the basis for sustainable growth in exports.
The Maritime Zero 2050 initiative
We will prioritise projects that target the Maritime Zero 2050 initiative. This must be projects that provide new, better and feasible zero-emission solutions for ships that are able to travel longer distances. The projects must contribute to sustainable innovations and develop new technology and solutions that are suitable for marine vessel segments and distances that do not currently have zero-emission solutions available.
To achieve the goal of zero-emission solutions over longer distances, it will be necessary to invest in activities ranging from basic research and knowledge development via applied research and development to testing and demonstration of solutions. To achieve beneficial and integrated collaboration on such activities, we invite research groups and enterprises to join forces and form consortia and to develop complex projects, some of which will involve activities suitable for a Collaborative and Knowledge-building Project while others are suitable for one or more Innovation Projects or Demonstration Projects.
Complex projects of this kind comprising all of these project types/application types will be assessed in the context of the spring 2022 round of applications, with simultaneous assessment and funding decisions by the portfolio board in June. In the Maritime Zero 2050 initiative, we will therefore also give priority to projects in which applicants and their business partners participate as partners in the call Collaborative Project to meet Societal and Industry-related Challenges with the deadline 9 February 2022 (see ‘Other relevant calls with the same topic’ below). This applies to projects and activities that are adjacent to the Demonstration Project.
Roughly NOK 40 million has been set aside in total for the Maritime Zero 2050 initiative and the funds will be awarded under this call and the calls Collaborative Project to meet Societal and Industry-related Challenges and Innovation Project for the Industrial Sector 2022.
For more information about priorities for this thematic area, please see the planning document under ‘Relevant plans’ below.
Requirements relating to collaboration and roles in Maritime industries
The Project Owner must carry out the project in effective collaboration with other companies in the value chain. If the Project Owner is a supplier company, the project must be carried out in effective collaboration with enterprises that are the technology’s end user(s). For the topic ‘Maritime industry’, the end user(s) may also be listed as the Project Owner and carry out projects in effective collaboration with suppliers.
Assessment of relevance
When awarding marks for the relevance criterion, we will consider how well the application addresses the above. Emphasis will be placed on the description of relevance under section 4.2 of the project description.
Budget, duration and funding amount
Roughly NOK 20 million has been set aside for projects relating to ‘Maritime industries’ in 2022.
The projects may have a duration of between 1 and 3 years, and receive NOK 1–16 million in funding from the Research Council.
Contacts
Other relevant calls with the same topic
Land-based food, the environment and bioresources
Funding is available for projects that encompass research-based innovations for production, value chains and consumption of land-based food and feed, forestry and wood-based industries, and other land-based bioresources.
Industry, including land-based biobased industries, plays a key role in the efforts to realise a sustainable future as described in the UN Sustainable Development Goals and ambitions for Norway’s green transition.We are looking for projects that contribute to limiting global warming, conserving biodiversity, reducing waste and pollution and ensuring a safe food supply. This requires a new approach to production, value chains and consumption.
Current solutions, technologies and value chains must be challenged, restructured and improved and there is also a need for brand new innovations and technologies. We will provide funding for projects that can form the basis for new trade and industry in Norway, and that can also be scaled up for the international market. We want to support businesses that will spearhead the work on realising the green transition and a sustainable future.
For more detailed information on priorities for this topic, see the portfolio plan in ‘Relevant plans’ below.
Budget and funding amount
Roughly NOK 6 million has been set aside for ‘Land-based food, the environment and bioresources’.
The projects may have a duration of between 1 and 2 years and can receive NOK 1–2 million in funding from the Research Council.
Contacts
Practical information
Requirements for this application type
Applications must be created and submitted via My RCN Web. The application and all attachments must be written in Norwegian or English. This call has an open-ended deadline. A unique grant application may only be submitted once (whereas calls with a fixed deadline may be submitted and resubmitted multiple times up to the submission deadline). It is nonetheless possible to create a new application, e.g., by submitting a copy of the one you have already submitted and thus submit a new version by the deadline. You can then decide which version you would like us to assess.
- All attachments to the online grant application form must be uploaded in PDF format. The templates for attachments can be found at the end of the call for proposals.
- The project description must be written using the designated template, and all sections must be completed.
- If the applicant has submitted the same or similar grant proposals to other Research Council calls for proposals, this must be stated in the grant application.
- All project costs must be budgeted in accordance with the Research Council's guidelines.
Mandatory attachments
- Project description of up to 10 pages in length using the designated template.
- Information about partners for the company submitting the grant application (Project Owner) and each of the participating companies (company partners) using the designated template.
- CVs for the project manager and other key project participants using the designated template. A maximum of five CVs can be attached per application.
- A Letter of Intent from all registered partners. The Letter of Intent should explain why the project is important to them and describe their financial and/or scientific commitments to the project.
Note that the templates are new for 2022.
All requirements set out in the call must be met. Applications that do not meet the formal requirements will not be considered. The application must comply with the framework for funding and duration set out under the relevant thematic area.
We will not assess documents and websites linked to in the application, or other attachments than those specified above.
Assessment criteria
We assess applications in light of the objectives of the application type in question and on the basis of the following criteria:
Excellence
• To what extent does the innovation represent something new?
• To what extent is the innovation targeted towards clear needs or new market opportunities for the Project Owner and the companies that are partners in the project?
• To what extent does the project build on relevant and updated knowledge?
• To what extent does the project employ relevant and recognised R&D methods?
• To what extent are the R&D activities ambitious and essential for the success of the innovation?
• To what extent does the project give appropriate consideration to ethical issues and/or gender perspectives in the research?
Impact
• To what extent does the project contribute to achieving the UN Sustainable Development Goals?
• To what extent can the project have positive external impacts for trade and industry, the public sector and society at large?
• To what extent will the project have significant financial benefits for the Project Owner and the companies that are partners?
• To what extent is the plan for implementation of the R&D results and realisation of benefits relevant and appropriate?
Implementation
• To what extent does the R&D project plan incorporate appropriate and effective objectives, work packages, milestones, resources and relevant risk assessments?
• To what extent does the project have a clear and distinct plan for demonstration/piloting?
• To what extent will the project have access to the necessary R&D expertise and adequate capacity to carry out the R&D tasks?
• To what extent does the project manager have appropriate expertise and experience to lead the R&D project?
• To what extent does the project have an appropriate project organisation with a clearly defined and relevant distribution of the budget, roles and responsibilities?
• To what extent does the project reflect the strategic priorities of the Project Owner and the companies that are partners?
• To what extent is the budget and funding plan realistic and feasible?
Relevance to the call for proposals
• To what extent have the conditions set out in the call for proposals with regard to collaboration and specification of roles been met?
• To what extent can support from the Research Council be expected to trigger increased R&D investment among the Project Owner and the companies that are partners in the project and provide added value to the project beyond the financial support?
• To what extent does the project meet the topic’s guidelines and priorities?
Administrative procedures
The application and mandatory attachments will be made available in a digital portal for referees who will perform an assessment of the criteria ‘Excellence’, ‘Impact’ and ‘Implementation’. Each application will be assessed by a referee panel comprising at least three experts. The referee panel will submit a consensus-based assessment for each of the three criteria.
After the panel has completed its assessment, a Research Council case officer will conduct an assessment of the criterion ‘Relevance to the call for proposals’. The assessment and marks for the four above-mentioned criteria will be consolidated into a single, overall mark that indicates the merit of the application.
The Research Council administration will then present the projects to the relevant Research Council portfolio boards for the final funding decision. The portfolio boards will attach importance to achieving a balanced project portfolio in the areas under their purview and in relation to ongoing projects and applications submitted under other calls for proposals. These assessments will be based on the budgetary framework, the text of the call for proposals and documents referred to in the description of the respective thematic areas.
Each portfolio board will also act in accordance with the Research Council’s general policy for allocation of funding:
- prioritisation of projects based on the impact on sustainability and the environment, assuming all other quality-related factors are essentially equal;
- prioritisation of projects led by women project managers, assuming all other quality-related factors are essentially equal;
- research ethics perspectives.
Expected funding decision
Applications will be processed in groups. The expected funding decision dates are presented in the table below. The Research Council will have two periods in 2022 during which applications will be received and processed. Some thematic areas may allocate all available funding by June 2022. In such case, we will post a notification of this at the top of the call for proposals. Applications received for topics that do not have available funding will be rejected.
Please note that rejected applications that are resubmitted without significant changes to the project and grant application will be considered on the basis of the original assessment by the portfolio board. If a previously unsuccessful grant application is resubmitted, but with significant changes to the project and the grant application itself, the application may be assessed again and by a panel comprised wholly or in part by the same referees who assessed the previous version. Applicants who are re-submitting a previously unsuccessful grant application must provide an account of the relevant changes and their significance to the project in section 4.3 of the project description.
Applications submitted from |
Normal reply date |
First possible start-up date |
Last possible start-up date (approx.) |
18 January to 9 March 2022 |
No later than by the end of June 2022 |
1 July 2022 |
31 December 2022 |
10 March to 14 September 2022 |
No later than mid-December 2022 |
1 January 2023 |
30 June 2023 |
Download templates
- Mal for prosjektbeskrivelse - Demonstrasjonsprosjekter i næringslivet 2022.docx
- Template for Project Description - Demonstration Project for the Industrial Sector 2022.docx
- Mal for partneropplysninger - Demonstrasjonsprosjekter i næringslivet 2022.docx
- Template for Information about Applicant and Partner Companies - Demonstration Project for the Industrial Sector 2022.docx
- Template for CV - Demonstration Project for the Industrial Sector 2022.docx
About the results of the application assessment process
- Total amount sought
- NOK 134 664 000
- Amount awarded
- NOK 61 073 000
- Total number of applications
- 17
- Number of approved applications
- 9
Project no. | Organization | Project title | Subject | Sought | Published |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
336967 | JOTUN A/S | Demonstration of HSS in Cruise | Maritim | 4 625 000 | 13.06.2022 |
337099 | WELL ID AS | GeoEnlight Pilot | Petroleum | 3 690 000 | 17.06.2022 |
337055 | Xsens AS | Clamp-on Wet Gas Flow Measurement | Petroleum | 12 500 000 | 17.06.2022 |
337048 | ALTUS INTERVENTION GROUP AS | Contextualised Digital Well Intervention | Petroleum | 10 000 000 | 17.06.2022 |
337115 | ORKEL AS | Mindre rundballplast - Demonstrasjon av nye pakkerteknologier | Landbasert mat, miljø og bioressurser | 1 627 000 | 24.06.2022 |
337017 | CIOL AS | CIOL – sustainable impregnation for the future | Landbasert mat, miljø og bioressurser | 1 701 000 | 24.06.2022 |
340943 | INNOVATION ENERGY AS | Demonstration of a downhole electrolytic cell to reduce the environmental footprint during Plugging & Abandonment of oil & gas wells | Petroleum | NOK 12 195 000 | 16.12.2022 |
341014 | MHWIRTH AS | RCD demonstration for riserless drilling | Petroleum | NOK 13 685 000 | 16.12.2022 |
340780 | EUROPEAN MUD COMPANY AS | Datafangst ved felttest av miljøvennlig fiberholdige produkter i bore/kompletterings væsker for redusert utslipp og økt produksjon. | Petroleum | NOK 1 050 000 | 16.12.2022 |
Messages at time of print 15 November 2024, 06:27 CET