Researcher Project for Experienced Scientists (FRIPRO)
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Purpose
The purpose of FRIPRO is to fund curiosity-driven and bold research that can contribute to advancing the state-of-the-art. FRIPRO supports both basic and applied research in all research areas. This call is aimed at experienced scientists who have demonstrated the ability to conduct research of high scientific quality.
About the call for proposals
About FRIPRO
New knowledge often arises in unexpected ways and in areas that are impossible to predict. Therefore, free, basic research is important for scientific and academic renewal, and can form the basis for more applied research, business development and policy-making. The FRIPRO scheme will contribute to this, and we are therefore announcing funding for basic and applied research projects in all research areas, where the project ideas come from the scientists themselves.
At FRIPRO, we are willing to invest in the bold research that has the potential to provide significant advances in the field, even if it also has a significant risk of failing. Describe well how you will manage the risk and alternative plans if the first ones do not go as desired.
We do not have any requirements regarding the potential for societal impact in the projects we fund through FRIPRO. The peer reviewers will only assess the applications on this point if you have described such possible effects in the application.
FRIPRO's three career stages
Through FRIPRO, we want to reach researchers at different stages of their careers. We have three calls for proposals – one for each stage of the research career:
- Three-year Researcher Project with International Mobility: for project managers with 0-7 years' experience after receiving their PhD
- Researcher Project for Early Career Scientists: for project managers with 2-7 years' experience after receiving their PhD
- Researcher Project for Experienced Scientists (this call): for project managers with at least 6 years' experience after receiving their PhD or being approved with associate professor competence
If you meet the requirements for more than one call, our general recommendation is to choose the one that is best suited for the earliest stages of your career. Here, we expect you to have the best chance of reaching the top of the competition for funding.
Fierce competition in FRIPRO
FRIPRO is for particularly talented researchers in their fields, and getting funded is tough. Every year, we receive far more applications worthy of support than we are able to fund. We therefore have a set a mark requirement to be considered for funding from FRIPRO. Only applications awarded a mark of 6 or 7 from the panels on all the assessment criteria (on a scale of marks from 1-7, where 7 is the highest mark), will be eligible for funding. We therefore recommend that you make your application as good as possible before you submit it.
Among the eligible applications, we place most emphasis on the criteria Excellence – potential for advancing the state-of-the-art and Excellence – quality of R&D activities when selecting applications for funding.
Priority will be given to projects with women project managers when the applications are otherwise assessed equally.
When can you submit your application and when will you receive an answer?
FRIPRO's three calls for proposals have ongoing application reception and processing. This means that you can submit an application at any time as long as you are not subject to a FRIPRO waiting period or submission restriction period. We process the applications as they are received. The project for which you are applying for funding must have a planned project start 8-18 months after you submit the application. Read more under "Administrative procedures" about application processing and application processing time.
We have made a video where we go through the application form: FRIPRO ongoing application reception and processing (video in Norwegian).
The call is available in both Norwegian and English. The text of the Norwegian call for proposals is legally binding. In the event of changes, the call text that appears at the time you submit the application applies to your application.
Who is eligible to apply?
Only approved Norwegian research organisations may apply. See here for the list of approved Norwegian research organisations.
Who can participate in the project?
Requirements relating to the Project Owner
The research organisation listed as the Project Owner in the application form must have approved the submission of the application.
Requirements relating to the project manager
- Experience requirements: You must have an approved doctoral degree or obtained associate professor qualifications. From the date of the public defence or the date you obtained the associate professor qualification and until the day you submit the application, at least six years must have passed. For the purposes of this call, being or having been employed as researcher 1, researcher 2 or senior researcher in the institute sector is considered to be associate professor competence.
- You cannot be the project manager for an application for a Researcher Project for Experienced Scientists (FRIPRO) if you have a waiting period or submission restriction period in FRIPRO. See detailed description below.
- Ongoing project: If you are already the project manager for a project with funding from FRIPRO, you can only be the project manager for a new application for funding from FRIPRO if the new project has a start date after the end date in the first approved contract for the ongoing project. If you are unsure of which date applies to you, contact the case officer for the ongoing project.
Waiting period and submission restriction period
As a project manager for a FRIPRO application, you will have a one-year waiting period calculated from the date you submitted the application until you can be the project manager for a new FRIPRO application. If the application receives marks below the set limits from the panel assessing it, you will also be subject to a submission restriction period of 1-2 years. The length of the submission restriction period depends on the call from which you applied for funding. In the table below, you can see which average marks give the different waiting and submission restriction periods. (Scale of marks 1–7, where 7 is the highest mark.)
Call for proposals |
1 year waiting period |
1 year waiting period |
1 year waiting period |
Researcher project for experienced scientists |
7–5,75 |
5,5–3,25 |
3–1 |
Researcher Project for Early Career Scientists/Young Talents |
7–4,75 |
4,5–1 |
None |
Three-year Researcher Project with International Mobility |
All |
None |
None |
You cannot be the project manager for a new FRIPRO application if you have a waiting period or submission restriction period, but you can be a project participant in other FRIPRO applications and a project manager for applications for other calls from the Research Council, regardless of the waiting period and submission restriction period in FRIPRO. The waiting period and submission restriction period apply across all FRIPRO's calls, unless otherwise described in the call.
The waiting period also means that you can only be the project manager for one application to FRIPRO at a time. You must therefore choose which of the three calls you want to apply for. Check the requirements for the project manager and purpose for each call to see which one is right for you and your project.
The submission restriction period does not have retroactive effect and only applies in the calls where the submission restriction period is/was described. Project managers for applications submitted in 2022 and previous years with a mark point average below the thresholds are therefore not in a submission restriction period. These project managers can be the project manager for a FRIPRO application at this time.
Requirements relating to partners
Only approved research organisations (see "Who is eligible to apply?" above) or equivalent research organisations in other countries are eligible to be partners and receive funding under this call. Other types of organisations, such as companies and other undertakings, may not be project partners in Researcher Projects. Read more about partners.
The Project Owner and/or partners can engage subcontractors to provide services and contribute to the implementation of certain tasks in the project. Subcontractors may not be granted rights to project results. Organisations that are subject to the regulations for public procurement must in the normal manner carry out the selection of subcontractors in accordance with these regulations. It is not possible to have R&D suppliers in the project.
A project partner may not have two different roles in the project. This means that a subcontractor may not serve as Project Owner or partner in the project at the same time.
What can you seek funding for?
You can apply for funding to cover actual costs necessary to carry out the project. The Project Owner must obtain information about costs from the project partners. These costs are to be entered in the cost plan under the relevant cost category.
Support may be granted to cover the following costs:
- Payroll and indirect expenses. Costs related to researcher time (including research fellowships and the position of the project manager) at the research organisations participating in the project. For doctoral research fellowships, support is limited to a maximum of three years full-time equivalents. For postdoctoral fellowships, duration of the support is limited to a minimum of three years and a maximum of four years. See the Regulations relating to terms and conditions of employment for positions such as post-doctoral fellow, research fellow, research assistant and specialist candidate (only in Norwegian).
- Equipment. This includes operating and depreciation costs for scientific equipment and research infrastructure necessary to carry out the project.
- Operating expenses. Costs for other activities that are necessary to carry out the project's R&D activities. Purchase from subcontractors over NOK 100 000 must be specified.
You will find detailed and important information about what to enter in the project budget on our website on what the budget should contain.
If doctoral and postdoctoral research fellows are included in the project and you already have specific plans for them to stay abroad, you can apply for funding for the research stay(s) in the application now. The Research Council also has a separate call for proposals for research Research Stays Abroad for Doctoral and Post-doctoral Fellows. Here you can apply for funding for stays abroad for research fellows who are part of the project after the research fellow(s) have been employed.
Scope of funding
We can award funding of NOK 4-12 million per project under this call. We do not require own financing. However, if our lump sum rates do not cover all costs for recruitment positions in the university and university college sector or the institute sector or for research positions in the university and university college sector, the difference must be covered through own financing. For research positions in the institute sector, the institute's reported hourly rates must be used.
Conditions for funding
The Research Council will not award funding that constitutes state aid under this call. This means that the funding should only go to your non-economic activity. We require a clear separation of accounts for the organisation’s economic and non-economic activities. Our requirements for allocation and disbursement of support for the first year, and any pledges and payments for subsequent years, can be found in our General Terms and Conditions for R&D Projects on the information page What the contract involves.
If the project is awarded funding, the following must be in place when you revise the grant application:
- From 2022, all grant recipients that are research organisations and public sector bodies (Project Owners and partners) must have a Gender Equality Plan (GEP) available on their website. This must be in place before the contract is signed for projects awarded funding from the Research Council. The requirement does not apply to private businesses, special interest organisations or the voluntary sector.
- The Research Council requires full and immediate open access for scientific articles; see Plan S - Open access to publications.
- For all projects that handle data, the Project Owner must prepare a data management plan in connection with the revised grant application. Here you will find more information about requirements for data management plans in projects that receive funding from us.
- The Project Owner is responsible for selecting which archiving solution(s) to use for storing research data generated during the project.
- For medical and health-related studies involving human participants, the Research Council stipulates special requirements and guidelines for prospective registration of studies and publication of results.
Relevant thematic areas for this call
The call covers all disciplines and research areas, and we are accepting applications for funding for both applied and basic research.
Ground-breaking research
Practical information
Requirements for this application type
The application must be created and submitted via My RCN Web. You can create an application at any time. You can edit and save a created application until you submit it. It is the application that is submitted that is processed. You cannot change the application after you have submitted it.
If you wish to withdraw an application, you can do so by sending us an e-mail with a copy to the administrative officer stating the ES number of the application. Applications withdrawn within one month of submission do not result in a waiting period.
The application must meet the following requirements:
- The application and all attachments must be written in English.
- Mandatory attachments must be included.
- The attachments must be in PDF format.
Requirements relating to the project manager, the Project Owner, the research organisation and partners must be met.
The project must have a planned start date between 8 and 18 months after submission of the application.
If the application does not meet the requirements in the list above, we will ask you to withdraw the application and possibly resubmit it where the deficiencies have been corrected. If the application is not withdrawn, it may be rejected.
Mandatory attachments
The mandatory attachments must be written in templates that can be found at the end of the call.
- project description, maximum 11 pages
- CV of the project manager, maximum four pages
Optional attachments
- Attach CVs for the most important project participants, each a maximum of four pages. It is mandatory to use the CV template at the bottom of the call. Upload each CV as a separate attachment and select the attachment category "Curriculum vitae (CV)".
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- You will assess which project participants are the most important, and in which cases it will be of importance in the application processing to assess the project participants' qualifications.
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- If you wish, you can attach a brief description of competence or suggestions for up to three peers you believe would be suitable to assess your application. We are not obliged to use the suggestions, but can do so if necessary.
All attachments to the application must be submitted with the application.
Attachments other than those mentioned here as mandatory and optional, as well as any websites that you link to in the application, will not be included in the assessment of the application.
Be careful to upload the correct attachment type, as there are no technical restrictions on what kind of templates it is possible to upload in the application form.
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 – potential for advancing the state-of-the-art
• Scientific creativity and originality.
• Novelty and boldness of hypotheses or research questions.
• Potential for development of new knowledge beyond the current state-of-the-art, including significant theoretical, methodological, experimental or empirical advancement.
Excellence – quality of R&D activities
• Quality of the research questions, hypotheses and project objectives, and the extent to which they are clearly and adequately specified.
• Credibility and appropriateness of the theoretical approach, research design and use of scientific methods. Appropriate consideration of interdisciplinary approaches.
• The extent to which appropriate consideration has been given to ethical issues, safety issues, gender dimension in research content, and use of stakeholder/user knowledge if appropriate.
Impact
• Potential for academic impact:
The extent to which the planned outputs of the project address important present and/or future scientific challenges.
The extent to which the planned outputs are openly accessible to ensure reusability of the research outputs and enhance reproducibility.
• Potential for societal impact (if addressed by the applicant):
The extent to which the planned outputs of the project address UN Sustainable Development Goals or other important present and/or future societal challenges.
• The extent to which the potential impacts are clearly formulated and plausible.
Communication and exploitation
• The extent to which the appropriate open science practices are implemented as an integral part of the proposed project to ensure open sharing and wide distribution of research outputs.
• Quality and scope of communication and engagement activities with different target audiences, including relevant stakeholders/users.
Implementation
• The extent to which the project manager has relevant expertise and experience, and demonstrated ability to perform high-quality research (as appropriate to the career stage).
• The degree of complementarity of the participants and the extent to which the project group has the necessary expertise needed to undertake the research effectively.
The quality of the project organisation and management
• Effectiveness of the project organisation, including the extent to which resources assigned to work packages are aligned with project objectives and deliverables.
• Appropriateness of the allocation of tasks, ensuring that all participants have a valid role and adequate resources in the project to fulfil that role.
• Appropriateness of the proposed management structures and governance.
Administrative procedures
All FRIPRO applications are assessed by a panel of peer reviewers before the Portfolio Board for Ground-breaking Research makes a decision on whether to award funding to an application or not. The portfolio board will do this approximately every two months for all applications that have been peer-reviewed.
Applications that are not eligible for funding will be rejected. Applications that qualify for funding are included in the competition for funding in three decision rounds. If your application qualifies, but is not granted in the first decision round, it will be given a second chance in the next decision round. If it is not granted then either, it will be included in a third and final round. Applications that are included in their second or third round will compete on an equal footing with newly received applications.
The application processing time for each application will vary, depending on factors such as the number of applications received within the same subject area, the availability of peer reviewers and coincidences. The average application processing time is estimated to be 6-8 months for applications that receive a response in the first round of decisions in which they are processed, with variations of 2-10 months. If your application is included in several rounds, it will take 2-4 months longer before you receive an answer to your application compared to an application that is either rejected or that is awarded funding in its first round of decision.
We will announce which applications that are awarded funding about every two months, with the first time being in June 2024.
See "FRIPRO's application processing" on the FRIPRO information page for a more thorough description of the application processing in FRIPRO.
Create application
Applications for Researcher Project for Experienced Scientists (FRIPRO) should be created on My RCN Web. Application templates should be filled and uploaded in the application.
Create applicationAbout the results of the application assessment process
- Total amount sought
- 1 610 851 000
- Amount awarded
- 441 258 000
- Total number of applications
- 137
- Number of approved applications
- 38
Project no. | Organization | Project title | Subject | Sought | Published |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
350187 | Institutt for fredsforskning | Conflict-related attacks on education and children’s lost life opportunities (EdAttack) | Banebrytende forskning | 12 000 000 | 17.06.2024 |
350693 | Universitetet i Stavanger | Fano manifolds, wall structures and torus fibrations | Banebrytende forskning | 12 000 000 | 17.06.2024 |
351033 | Universitetet i Oslo | Disorder Induced Ordering in Gallium Oxide (DIOGO) | Banebrytende forskning | 12 000 000 | 17.06.2024 |
351037 | Universitetet i Oslo | Imaging the Big Bang through gravitational waves with LiteBIRD | Banebrytende forskning | 12 000 000 | 17.06.2024 |
351058 | Folkehelseinstituttet | Endometriosis and adenomyosis throughout the life-course | Banebrytende forskning | 12 000 000 | 17.06.2024 |
351123 | Universitetet i Oslo | NASTRAN: Numerical Analysis of STochastic tRANsport | Banebrytende forskning | 11 541 000 | 17.06.2024 |
351131 | Universitetet i Tromsø - Norges arktiske universitet | Viking to Christian Landscapes across the Norwegian Sea: Agricultural Trajectories and Resilience using sedaDNA and Fecal Lipids | Banebrytende forskning | 11 976 000 | 17.06.2024 |
351148 | Universitetet i Tromsø - Norges arktiske universitet | Establishment of a long non-coding RNA (lncRNA) cell type enrichment atlas with a focus on endothelial enriched lncRNA function | Banebrytende forskning | 10 599 000 | 17.06.2024 |
351166 | Universitetet i Bergen | Developing mRNA vaccines to fight viral diseases in Atlantic salmon | Banebrytende forskning | 11 996 000 | 17.06.2024 |
351985 | Universitetet i Bergen | Reconstructions of UV-B radiation across the Laschamps Geomagnetic Excursion | Banebrytende forskning | 12 000 000 | 17.06.2024 |
352031 | Helse Bergen HF | Cytokine autoantibodies reveal monogenic inheritance of endocrine autoimmunity | Banebrytende forskning | 12 000 000 | 17.06.2024 |
352052 | Institutt for fredsforskning | Recording Explosive Munitions for the analysis of WAR crimes | Banebrytende forskning | 11 999 000 | 17.06.2024 |
352116 | Norges miljø- og biovitenskapelige universitet | Duplicate Divergence in three Dimensions | Banebrytende forskning | 12 000 000 | 17.06.2024 |
353378 | Universitetet i Tromsø - Norges arktiske universitet | Cosmic Dust Injection into the Upper Earth Atmosphere | Banebrytende forskning | 11 997 000 | 17.06.2024 |
350026 | UNIVERSITETET I OSLO | ICONIC - The Emergence and Stabilisation of Iconicity in Human Speech | Banebrytende forskning | 12 000 000 | 06.09.2024 |
351721 | UNIVERSITETET I OSLO | Decoding the novel role of the endoplasmic reticulum in mechanotransduction | Banebrytende forskning | 12 000 000 | 06.09.2024 |
351781 | UNIVERSITETET I OSLO | Evolution of shapes and collectivity in exotic nuclei | Banebrytende forskning | 11 154 000 | 06.09.2024 |
352157 | UNIVERSITETET I OSLO | ZeoCAT: Zeotype-based Catalysts to produce consumables and fuels from recycled CO2 feedstock. | Banebrytende forskning | 11 998 000 | 06.09.2024 |
353300 | UNIVERSITETET I AGDER | Police interviews in Norwegian as a second language: Communicative challenges and solutions | Banebrytende forskning | 12 000 000 | 06.09.2024 |
353348 | NORGES TEKNISK-NATURVITENSKAPELIGE UNIVERSITET | Uncovering the neuromodulatory function of the choroid plexus and cerebrospinal fluid | Banebrytende forskning | 12 000 000 | 06.09.2024 |
353364 | NORGES TEKNISK-NATURVITENSKAPELIGE UNIVERSITET | Breaking the Time-Scale Problem (Infinity-RETIS) | Banebrytende forskning | 12 000 000 | 06.09.2024 |
353372 | UNIVERSITETET I OSLO | Mineralization as a fluid mixing process | Banebrytende forskning | 11 999 000 | 06.09.2024 |
353561 | UNIVERSITETET I OSLO | Turning the tables on dark matter nightmare scenarios | Banebrytende forskning | 11 954 000 | 06.09.2024 |
353778 | HØGSKOLEN I ØSTFOLD | The effectiveness of Småsteg on Socio-Emotional Learning in Kindergarten: a cluster randomized controlled trial | Banebrytende forskning | 11 910 000 | 06.09.2024 |
353885 | INSTITUTT FOR SAMFUNNSFORSKNING | Socioeconomic and Ethnic Inequality in Health and Intergenerational Mobility (HEALTHMOBILITY) | Banebrytende forskning | 12 000 000 | 06.09.2024 |
353894 | NORGES TEKNISK-NATURVITENSKAPELIGE UNIVERSITET | Superconducting orbitronics in hybrid systems | Banebrytende forskning | 8 919 000 | 06.09.2024 |
353919 | NORGES TEKNISK-NATURVITENSKAPELIGE UNIVERSITET | Unconventional Thermoelectric Quantum Transport in Novel 2D Magnetic Heterostructures | Banebrytende forskning | 12 000 000 | 06.09.2024 |
354047 | UNIVERSITETET I BERGEN | Geothermal Energy and Lithium Co-production: Multiphysics Modelling, Experimentation and Simulation | Banebrytende forskning | 12 000 000 | 06.09.2024 |
352151 | NORGES MILJØ- OG BIOVITENSKAPELIGE UNIVERSITET | Investigative economics and illicit finance | Banebrytende forskning | 10 302 000 | 17.10.2024 |
353393 | NORSK UTENRIKSPOLITISK INSTITUTT | DERISK: How firms navigate de-risking regimes | Banebrytende forskning | 11 997 000 | 17.10.2024 |
353785 | UNIVERSITETET I BERGEN | Cryptographic Elements of Trustworthy AI | Banebrytende forskning | 11 989 000 | 17.10.2024 |
354137 | UNIVERSITETSSENTERET PÅ SVALBARD AS | Auroral emission intensities — from validation to prediction | Banebrytende forskning | 4 969 000 | 17.10.2024 |
354420 | UNIVERSITETET I STAVANGER | Development of targeted lipid nanoparticles enclosing miRNA for the treatment of HER2-positive breast cancer (MICROTARGET). | Banebrytende forskning | 12 000 000 | 17.10.2024 |
354458 | OSLO UNIVERSITETSSYKEHUS HF | Tankyrase Inhibition in Metastatic Melanoma Immunotherapy | Banebrytende forskning | 11 997 000 | 17.10.2024 |
354604 | UNIVERSITETET I BERGEN | The Dark Side of Sustainability: Norway and the Rise and Fall of Salmon Farming in Chile. A transnational history of the future (1970-2030) | Banebrytende forskning | 11 964 000 | 17.10.2024 |
354612 | UNIVERSITETET I BERGEN | "Regional downscaling of eco-physiological theory. Confronting global predictions with local observations." | Banebrytende forskning | 11 998 000 | 17.10.2024 |
353416 | UNIVERSITETET I OSLO | What is the Purpose of Responsible Business? Bringing Society to Stakeholder Theory | Banebrytende forskning | 12 000 000 | 17.10.2024 |
353629 | UNIVERSITETET I OSLO | "Unveiling Resilience: Prospectively Unravelling Factors in Alzheimer’s Disease and Related Dementias through Biostatistical Advancements." | Banebrytende forskning | 12 000 000 | 17.10.2024 |
Messages at time of print 23 November 2024, 09:13 CET