Deadline: 25-Oct-23
Applications are now open for the NNF Challenge Programme to make substantial contribution to the development of the Danish research environment, within ambitious research aimed to solve major challenges in health and the sustainability of society and the planet.
The aim is to give leading researchers the opportunity to assemble a strong team that can collaborate in a centre-like structure with a unifying vision and mission to develop solutions to major challenges. The Programme provides long-term funding to enable scientific depth and focus and facilitate synergy between the research partners.
Research Theme 2024
- The programme is a strategic effort targeting specific challenges within annually selected research themes. For the 2024 application call, the Challenge Programme is seeking to support the following research theme:
- Novel or emerging technologies for sustainable and continuous energy supply
- The Challenge is to advance fundamental knowledge and development of novel or emerging technologies for sustainable and continuous energy supply, complementing intermittent energy supply forms, thereby contributing to a decarbonised and secure energy system in the future.
- The Challenge calls for interdisciplinary collaboration between physics, chemistry, engineering, energy planning, modelling, and materials science. The research could target fundamental understanding of controlled energy production based on nuclear reactions, the development of enabling technologies providing sustainable, continuous, safe, and robust energy production, or it could address technologies for energy storage across relevant timescales. Priority will not be given to carbon-based energy forms, nor to conversion between energy carriers, such as in fuel cells. The successful research plan should include a systematic assessment of the pros and cons of the proposed research or developing technology relative to other types of sustainable energy production, and the project should also contain a plan for university-level educational activities and public outreach.
- Supported research may include, but is not limited to:
- Research on novel or emerging nuclear technologies that are potentially more affordable and address safety and waste concerns as, e.g., small modular reactors, Thorium breeder reactors, or molten salt reactors.
- Fundamental research that advances knowledge on fusion power generation.
- The physics and chemistry of molten salts, and their use as a medium for energy storage across relevant timescales.
- Development of technologies that address the scope of the challenge.
Funding Information
- A total of up to DKK 120 million is available for grants between DKK 30 million and DKK 60 million for projects lasting up to 6 years.
Eligibility Criteria
- The Challenge Programme supports excellent research leaders from 2-4 research groups (main applicant plus 1-3 co-applicants).
- The programme leader must be at least 75% affiliated with a Danish university, hospital or other non-profit research organisation, that will be considered the host institution of the project.
- The research institutions of the co-applicants can be located in Denmark or abroad. The co-applicants should contribute significantly to the advancement of the project and should receive part of the funding.
- Industry collaboration is possible; however, funding cannot be awarded to industrial partner(s).
For more information, visit NNF.