How does the energy crisis affect Norway?
A day of insight
Welcome to Risor Chamber Music Festival on Wednesday 24 June. Together with the Eyde Cluster, we invite you to a day of insight, drawing inspiration from both business and cultural life: a meeting place during Risor Chamber Music Festival.
How does the global energy crisis affect Norway?
The world is changing rapidly. Wars, conflicts, and trade barriers shape the global agenda. This has consequences for energy supply and global value chains, and affects Norway as well. We will gain insight into the energy situation and its consequences for industry. How do actors working in the midst of this turbulence assess the outlook ahead?
Contributors and knowledge sharers:
- Erik Holm Reiso, Rystad Energy
- Arooj Iftekhar, Alcoa Norway
- Stina Torjesen, University of Agder
Erik Holm Reiso, partner at Rystad Energy, one of the world's most important energy analysis firms, gives an overview of the global energy situation. Arooj Iftekhar, Head of Communications at Alcoa Norway, an aluminium company with operations around the world, offers insight into how the turmoil affects their company.
Stina Torjesen from UiA leads the conversation and contributes experience in sustainable and circular battery value chains.
See today's programme here
- 14.30: Welcome to the day of insight outside the church
- 15.00: The concert "Gold Lasts Forever" in Risor Church.
- 16.30: Light refreshments and mingling at Risorhuset
- 17.00: Agder's energy future: what comes next?
You pay either for the full day including the concert (NOK 400 excl. VAT), or only for the talk at 17.00 (NOK 250 excl. VAT).
BUY TICKETS FOR THE GATHERING HERE
BUY TICKETS FOR THE PERFORMANCE HERE
About the concert: Gold Lasts Forever
What happens when we look at the old and established with new eyes? How can the old inspire and influence the new? This concert is filled with both composers and musicians who play with older works, but also with musical concepts. POING transforms Grieg through saxophone, accordion, and double bass. Errollyn Wallen deconstructs boogie-woogie for the violin, while Hindemith challenges what chamber music could be.
But one thing is certain: gold lasts forever, because quality endures everything.