Norwegian Defence Research Establishment

Norwegian Defence Research Establishment
Motto FFI turns knowledge and ideas into an effective defence
Type Research Establishment
Established April 11th 1946
Students 23,162[1]
Location Kjeller, Norway
Website www.ffi.no

The Norwegian Defence Research Establishment (Forsvarets forskningsinstitutt FFI) is a research institute that conducts research and development on behalf of the Norwegian Armed Forces and provides expert advice to political and military defence leaders. In particular, its task is to keep track of advances in the fields of science and military technology which might affect the assumptions on which Norwegian security policy and/or defence planning is based.

The institute was established in 1946, with its roots in British WWII research, where many Norwegian scientists/technologists took part (their own country occupied by the Germans 19401945). FFI has 550 employees, of which approximately 360 are scientists and engineers. The main location of the institute is at Kjeller near Lillestrøm, 20 km east of the country's capital Oslo. The Kjeller area is a hub of research activity in south eastern Norway, with a total of some 2,400 people working at a variety of research establishments, colleges and university departments.

Part of the institute's Maritime Systems Division is situated in the coastal city of Horten, southwest of Oslo on the western side of the Oslofjord. Horten is known as the country's MEMS capital, and is also a center of electronics and naval research and industry.

In way of concrete technology products, FFI is known for, among other things:

Researchers

Former researchers

See also

References

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