FINAL SEMINAR PROGRAM 2. & 3. OCTOBER 2018 · 10/3/2018  · SISVI Final Seminar 3 October 2018...

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FINAL SEMINAR PROGRAM 2. & 3. OCTOBER 2018

Trondheim, Tuesday 2. Oct. Scandic Bakklandet Hotel

19.30 - Dinner at Brasseri Bakklandet ‘Grillen’ room Scandic Bakklandet Hotel.

Trondheim, Wednesday 3. October 2018.

Room F5, Gamle Fysikk, Sem Selandsvei 5, Gløshaugen

RESEARCHERS & ACADEMIC SEMINAR FOCUS,

09.00 - 09.10 Welcome and introduction to SISVI, by Professor Annik M. Fet

Investigation into research approach and methods for SISVI and future research challenges. This can include a dialogue between each Work Package Leader PhD/ Masters Students.Time for questions provided in each 30 minutes session.

09.10 - 09.40 WP1-highlights by Professor Arild Aspelund and students09.40 - 10.10 WP2-highlights by Professor Alf Steinar Sætre and students10:10 - 10:40 WP3-highlights by Professor Luitzen de Boer and students

10:40 - 11:10 Coffee break and fruit11:10 – 11.40 WP4-highlights by Professor Annik M. Fet and students11:40 - 12:10 PhD Presentation by Sigurd Vildåsen and Research Futures

12.10 – 13.10 Lunch

INDUSTRY SEMINAR FOCUS

13.10 – 13.20 Project experiences, by Professor Annik M. Fet Company presentations and dialogue, 25 minutes each session.

13:20 – 13:45 Hexagon Ragasco, Magrethe Skattum 13:45 – 14:10 Plasto, Runar Stenerud 14:10 – 14:35 Forsvarsbygg, Magnus Sparrevik14:35 – 14:50 ISIFLO, Lars Ølstad

14:50 – 15.00 Summary of the day and chanllenges by Kjell Øren

15.00 – 15.10 Project wrap-up by Professor Annik M. Fet

SISVI Final Seminar, 2‐3 October 2018, Trondheim – Participant List  

 

 

 

Participant  Email  Organisation 

Alf Steinar Sætre (Speaker)  alf.steinar@ntnu.no  NTNU 

Ali Ebrahimi  ali.ebrahimi@ulstein.com  Ulstein 

Annik Magerholm Fet (Speaker)  annik.fet@ntnu.no  NTNU 

Arild Aspelund (Speaker)  arild.aspelund@ntnu.no  NTNU 

Arron Tippett  arrontippett@hotmail.com  NTNU 

Dina Margrethe Aspen  dina.aspen@ntnu.no  NTNU 

Eli Fyhn Ullern  eli.fyhn.ullern@sintef.no  Sintef 

Fanny Hermundsdottir  fanny.hermundsdottir@gmail.com  NTNU student 

Haley Knudson  haley.knudson@ntnu.no  NTNU 

Jon Halfdanarson  jon.halfdanarson@ntnu.no  Møreforsking 

Kjell Oren  kjell.oren@nho.no  NHO 

Lars Ølstad (Speaker)  l.olstad@isiflo.com  Isiflo 

Luitzen De Boer (Speaker)  deboer@iot.ntnu.no  NTNU 

Magnus Sparrevik (Speaker)  Magnus.Sparrevik@forsvarsbygg.no  Forsvarsbygg 

Magrethe Skattum (Speaker)  Margrethe.Skattum@hexagonragasco.com  Hexagon Ragasco 

Michael Myrvold Jenssen  michael.jenssen@iot.ntnu.no  NTNU 

Paritosh Deshpande  paritosh.deshpande@ntnu.no  NTNU 

Runar Stenerud (Speaker)  runar@plasto.no  Plasto 

Shannon Truloff (Organiser)  shannon.truloff@ntnu.no  NTNU 

Sigurd Sagen Vildåsen (Speaker)  sigurd.vildasen@ntnu.no  NTNU 

Xinlu Qiu  xinlu.qiu@ntnu.no  NTNU 

SISVI Final Seminar 3 October 2018

Project wrap-up and summary of the day - some reflections

Kjell Øren

SISVI has been an impressive project, both related to content and involvement. It fulfills the true nature of a KPN project – contributing to progressing the sustainability theme both in academia and in industry.

Some reflections and points of view, based on presentations and discussions:

1. License to operate - beyond regulations Industry has developed a high level of awareness of the Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR) aspects. The academic structuring of the themes has helped companies to identify specific issues that are especially relevant for them.

2. Life cycle perspective well established The value chain approach and LCAs are important perspectives and tools, now much used by business and industry. The next step is emerging – taking a systems view on both operations and strategy. The industrial ecology concept covers the basic ideas, although circular economy has become the new slogan. Linking across the traditional value chains deserves special attention.

3. Case study approach – real challenges The company cases have demonstrated the value of working with real problems. Companies have their specific challenges, addressing them both from a theoretical and practical perspective add insight and help towards implementation.

4. Green competitiveness – on a good track, but still a way to go Business action on sustainability depends on

- the markets – formed by customers’ preferences, demands and willingness to pay the extra cost

- the technology – the ability to bring new and better solutions - the regulatory framework/policy instruments, set by authorities at global,

regional and national levels

These three factors – market, technology and policy/policy instruments – and the combination of them – are keys to competitiveness and business action for sustainability. In the future follow up, more attention should given to policy instruments.

5. Public/private partnerships The nature of the problems to be solved calls for public-private partnerships at a scale we never have seen so far. We need extended public/private partnerships to accelerate innovation and implementation in different sectors. Public procurement is one of the instruments, CO2 fund for commercial transport another one.