Special funding for international collaboration in high-performance computing 2024
- for individual research teams or consortia composed of two or more research teams
- application must include at least one international collaborator from at least one of the countries/regions specified in the call text
- applied for to cover a Finnish research team’s salaries and other direct research costs of the project
- up to €500,000 for individual project
The funding granted under the present call will support international research collaboration that makes use of European cooperation in using EuroHPC’s high-performance computing resources, cooperation in using the LUMI supercomputer with partners in the US states of Texas and/or Colorado and/or researchers from the US National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) and/or research teams in Japan or the UK. The funding is not intended for coordination or planning of collaborations.
In this call, you cannot apply for funding with the same research plan that has been awarded funding under the 2023 call in this same theme.
The funding is based on Finland’s strategic partnerships with the aforementioned countries/regions. The projects to be funded must combine the following aspects:
- utilising EuroHPC or the LUMI supercomputer in research
- international collaboration with research teams in the aforementioned countries/regions
- high-quality scientific research.
At the core of the Research Council of Finland’s activities is to provide funding for excellent scientific research. The research we fund is also expected to have high scientific and societal impact and follow the principles of responsible science.
Before you fill in your application in the online services (SARA), carefully read the call text and the funding terms and conditions. If the call text and the funding terms and conditions conflict, the terms and conditions should always be considered primary.
If the translated English or Swedish version of the call text is in conflict with the Finnish call text, the Finnish version should always be considered primary.
Read the full call text on this page.
The aim of the special funding is to support the development of a diverse future computing ecosystem and the expansion of computing expertise into new sectors at both national and international level. The funding is designed to promote scientific renewal and diversity, the quality of research and scientific impact as well as impact beyond academia.
The funding granted under the present call will support international research collaboration that makes use of European cooperation in using EuroHPC’s high-performance computing resources, cooperation in using the LUMI supercomputer with partners in the US states of Texas and/or Colorado and/or researchers from the US National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) and/or research teams in Japan or the UK. The funding is not intended for coordination or planning of collaborations.
The European High Performance Computing Joint Undertaking (EuroHPC JU) is aimed at developing a world-class supercomputing ecosystem by pooling the resources of the European Union, European countries and private partners. Supercomputing is at the heart of the digital transformation in science, enabling deeper scientific understanding and breakthroughs in nearly every scientific field.
LUMI is a supercomputer project of the EuroHPC JU designed to improve research, employment and competitiveness in Finland and throughout Europe. LUMI provides not only supercomputing capacity but it is also one of the world’s leading platforms for artificial intelligence. Throughout its lifecycle, it will be one of the most visible scientific instruments in the world. Learn more about the LUMI supercomputer.
In December 2022, CSC – the Finnish IT Centre for Science and Texas Advanced Computing Center (TACC) at the University of Texas at Austin signed a Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) to promote research collaboration in the area of key high-performance computing (HPC) applications to address global challenges.
In February 2022, the Finnish Government and the US State of Colorado signed a MoU to promote sustainable development and the green economy as well as the development of cutting-edge future technologies such as computing.
In January 2024, the Finnish Ministry of Education, Science and Culture and the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA), part of the US federal government, entered into an agreement on cooperation in the geosciences and space sciences. The aim is to support collaboration between NASA and Finnish researchers using the Large Unified Modern Infrastructure (LUMI) supercomputer located at the CSC data centre in Kajaani.
In May 2022, CSC signed a Memorandum of Cooperation (MoC) with Japan’s RIKEN Center for Computational Science (R-CCS) to advance excellent international research at global level and to provide researchers with unprecedented resources for conducting research.
The funding is based on Finland’s strategic partnerships with the aforementioned countries/regions. The projects to be funded must combine the following aspects:
- utilising EuroHPC or the LUMI supercomputer in research
- international collaboration with research teams in the aforementioned countries/regions
- high-quality scientific research.
The funding may be applied for by individual research teams or consortia composed of two or more research teams. The consortium parties may represent one or several research organisations.
A consortium application is an application built around a joint research plan, where each party to the consortium applies for funding. The Research Council of Finland treats a consortium application as a single application, although the funding is granted to each subproject separately. Consortium compositions cannot be changed after the call deadline. Read the guidelines for consortium applications.
In addition to a doctoral degree, the principal investigator (PI) of the proposed project must also have other significant scientific merits. Usually the PI is a researcher at the professor or docent (adjunct professor) level. These criteria also apply to subproject PIs in consortia. In addition, the applicant must have a close connection with Finland to support the implementation of a multi-year project. This connection must be evident from the application.
The PI of the application cannot be changed while the application is being processed (after the call has closed but before the decision). The only exception to this is if the PI dies.
Special terms and restrictions
The application must name at least one international collaborator from at least one of the countries/regions/organisations specified in the call text under ‘Background and objectives’ (Europe, UK, Japan, Texas, Colorado, NASA). The research collaboration must make use of EuroHPC’s resources (European cooperation) or the LUMI supercomputer (UK, Japan, Texas, Colorado, NASA). Applicants must append to their applications a letter of collaboration from the international collaborator, describing the use of HPC resources within the framework of the cooperation.
In this call, you cannot apply for funding with the same research plan that has been awarded funding under the 2023 call in this same theme.
In this call, we will consider (process) only one application per applicant (incl. consortium subproject). If you submit more than one application to the call, only the first application to arrive will be considered (processed).
The PI’s salary costs may only under certain limitations and on justifiable grounds be incorporated into the total project costs. Read more in the call text under ‘Funding to be applied for and funding period’.
We will not consider (process) an application if the applicant is a member of the Research Council of Finland’s Board, one of the scientific councils or the Strategic Research Council.
You must immediately notify us if you receive funding from other sources for the same purpose after you have submitted your application to us.
We will not consider (process) an application by a person who has participated in the planning of the call to an extent likely to give them a comparative advantage over other applicants
We will not process an application if the applicant has been found guilty of research misconduct in the three years preceding the year of the call.
If the application includes cooperation with Russia or Belarus, you must take into account our policies on the matter.
If you have not submitted a final report on a completed or ongoing Research Council-funded project by the set deadline, we may decide not to consider (process) your application.
An application will not be considered (processed) if the applicant or the application does not meet the competence requirements or other key requirements, or if there are otherwise no conditions for processing the case.
A scientific council or another decision-making body may decide not to fund an application based on science policy objectives, or if it is apparent for some other reason that the applicant cannot receive funding with the submitted application.
Read more about the circumstances that may cause us not to process or review an application.
The funding period is 1 January 2025–31 December 2027.
The maximum funding for an individual project is 500,000 euros.
The funding is primarily intended towards the salaries of researchers who work full-time on the project and for other project costs.
The funding is granted to a Finnish site of research (usually a university or research institute) through which the funding is paid.
The PI of the funded project must have a close connection with Finland to support the implementation of a multi-year project. The funded researchers may, however, spend time working abroad during their funding period.
Funding plan
In the application, provide a cost estimate including an estimate of the annual amount of funding needed, itemised by type of expenditure. Also include a funding plan that shows all funding granted for the project as well as funding that will be provided by the site of research if the project is launched.
Before submitting the application, you must agree with the administration at your organisation on the contribution of the site of research to the funding of the project. Only costs that pass through the books of the site of the research must be included in the total costs. You must check with your organisation whether the funding planned as the own funding contribution suits this purpose.
The funding applied for from the Research Council of Finland must not exceed 70% of the total project costs. The cost estimate must be realistic.
The most significant research costs to be funded are justified by type of expenditure in the free-text field on the tab ‘Funding for the project’.
You can apply for funding to cover, for example, the following direct research costs:
- research team salaries
- PI’s salary costs (under certain limitations)
- salaries of researchers returning to Finland
- essential implementation costs
- travel expenses
- collaboration and mobility in Finland
- international collaboration and mobility
- preparation of international projects.
Our funding cannot be used for economic activity. Read more about the eligibility of economic operators.
Only for compelling reasons can government grants be awarded to cover salary costs in cases where the applicant has obstacles related to illegal employment, as referred to in section 7(2) of the Finnish Act on Discretionary Government Transfers.
Research team salaries
As a rule, staff hired with Research Council research funding must have an employment relationship. We recommend that they be hired for a period of employment no shorter than the funding period, unless a shorter contract is necessary for special reasons dictated by the implementation of the research project. Short-term research, studies or other assignments (max. duration six months) may also be carried out in the form of outsourced services.
Salary costs of principal investigator
Our funding for research projects (Academy Projects, Targeted Academy Projects and Academy Programme Projects) is primarily intended for the salaries of full-time researchers working on the projects and for other research costs.
As a rule, funding is not granted for the salary of the project PI. The PI’s salary costs may only under certain limitations and on justifiable grounds be incorporated into the total project costs. The PI’s salary is entered under ‘Salary of principal investigator’ in the online services. In order for the salary costs to be eligible, the PI’s tasks must be clearly specified.
Including PI’s salary for project management in total project costs
The PI’s salary costs may be incorporated into the total project costs in accordance with what is stated under the tab ‘Salary of principal investigator’ in the online services.
The salary costs must not be significant in relation to the project’s total costs. For example, a four-year research project must not include more than six months of the PI’s effective working hours for project management.
Applying for funding for PI’s salary for research
The Research Council may grant funding for the PI’s salary for no more than a year for well-justified reasons, such as working abroad, returning to Finland or transferring to another research organisation or a company in Finland. Possible business collaboration must fulfil the terms set out in our funding terms and conditions.
A condition is that the research-related reasons and the PI’s tasks must be clearly presented on the tab ‘Salary of principal investigator’ in the online services. The funding cannot be used for this purpose unless it is mentioned in the special conditions accompanying the funding decision.
Account of salary when PI does not have an employment relationship
If the PI does not have an employment relationship with, for example, a university or research institute for the duration of the funding period, they must explain how their salary will be covered during the funding period on the tab ‘Salary of principal investigator’ in the online services.
Retired researchers can be granted funding on the same grounds as other researchers.
Mobility aid in research projects
The mobility aid is applied for as research costs related to the implementation of the research plan. The aid is applied for in accordance with the practices of the site of research. In order to obtain further information, you should contact the personnel and financial administration of the site of research.
In the online services, the aid is applied for on the tab ‘Funding for the project’ under ‘Travel expenses’. The mobility aid must be justified. Read more about the mobility aid in the funding terms and conditions.
What is required from the site of research?
We require that the site of research (e.g. a university, research institute or research organisation; see guidelines for sites of research) provides the research project with all necessary basic facilities. These are determined based on the nature of the research and are the same as those available to other research staff at the site: office and laboratory premises, equipment (incl. computer equipment), and telecommunications, telephone, mailing, copying and library services.
When accepting the funding, the site of research is responsible for ensuring that necessary statements and permits from ethics committees have been obtained before the start of the project.
The costs of ensuring immediate open access to peer-reviewed articles are included in the overheads of the site of research and are thus part of the basic facilities provided by the site. The costs associated with storing and sharing research data are regarded as overheads for the project’s site of research. Only exceptionally and for justified reasons can they be accepted as research costs to be covered by Research Council of Finland research funding.
The site of research also commits to ensuring that the data management plan can be implemented at the site of research, and that the measures to be taken comply with good data management practice. After a positive funding decision, the site of research will also approve the data management plan of the project.
Read more in the guidelines on the commitment by the site of research.
The application must also include the overheads percentage, indirect employee costs and coefficient for effective working hours of the site of research. The site of research will see to that this information is kept up to date in the online services. The information is provided as percentages.
When the site of research is a university or a research institute, as a rule, the funding must be applied for VAT included. Consult the financial administration at the site of research for more information. Our funding may also cover VAT costs, but only on certain conditions (see Value added tax and read more in the funding terms and conditions).
How to submit and supplement the application
The non-negotiable call deadline also applies to consortia. We will not consider (process) an application that has not been submitted by deadline. The deadline for applications is 8 May 2024 at 16.15 Finnish time.
The joint consortium application is submitted by the consortium PI. The PI can submit the consortium application only after all subproject PIs have tagged their applications as complete.
Make sure to submit the application in good time before the deadline. The system will only accept applications that contain all obligatory information. The applicant is responsible for ensuring that the content of the application appendices is correct.
You can edit and supplement the application until the deadline. You can make changes to a submitted application (e.g. change appendices), but you must make them before the deadline.
If you notice that your application lacks important information after the deadline, immediately get in touch with us via our helpdesk, so that the application can be reopened for supplementation. We will consider the supplemented information if it is possible in view of the review and decision-making process.
We may ask you to supplement the application. The request for supplementation will be sent to you by email. If you do not supplement the application by the given deadline, or if the application is substantially incomplete even after a request for supplementary information, we may decide to dismiss it (i.e. it will not be processed). You must make sure that your contact details (email address) are up to date.
How the application becomes pending
According to section 17 of the Finnish Administrative Procedure Act and section 8 of the Act on Electronic Services and Communication in the Public Sector, the sender is responsible for the application arriving by the set deadline. An application becomes pending when the online application and the obligatory appendices have been submitted in the online services. The system will confirm a successful submission by sending an email to the address you have provided.
If you fail to submit a final report on a completed or ongoing project according to our guidelines, we may decide not to process your new application.
An application will not be processed if the applicant or the application does not meet the competence requirements or other key requirements, or if the application otherwise does not qualify for processing.
A scientific council or another decision-making body may decide not to fund an application based on science policy objectives, or if it is apparent for some other reason that the applicant cannot receive funding with the submitted application.
Read more about the circumstances that may cause us not to process or review an application.
Publicity and data protection
Except for the research plan, plan of intent, abstract and progress report, which are primarily confidential, the application and its appendices are public documents. For example, the CV is a public document and as such must not include any confidential information. This publicity is based on the Finnish Act on the Openness of Government Activities.
We are committed to following regulations on data protection. The applicant is responsible for the disclosure of the personal data contained in the application and, where appropriate, for requesting the consent of the parties concerned.
The GDPR-compliant privacy statement concerning the research funding process is available on our website under Data protection.
The application consists of forms completed in the online services and PDF appendices. As an applicant, you have the right to submit your application in Finnish or Swedish, but we ask that you to submit it in English to facilitate the international review.
CSC – the IT Centre for Science provides LUMI high-performance computing resources to researchers in Finland. Read more about how to apply for national LUMI resources, and contact the CSC already when preparing your project.
Most of the links below take you to the A–Z index of application guidelines and our website.
The online application contains the following parts
Personal data
- Personal details
- Degrees (most recent one first); parental leaves etc. may be filled in under ‘Additional information’
- Titles of docent and professorships
General information
- Select the scientific council. See the research fields of the scientific councils.
- Details on the site of research
- Title of research project in English and Finnish/Swedish
- Research fields (at least one, no more than five). See the research field classification.
- Keywords in English and Finnish/Swedish
Consortium parties (if applicable)
- Details on each party (name, email address, organisation and country)
- Read the guidelines for consortium applications.
Abstract
- Maximum length 2,500 characters including spaces
- Brief overview of scientific and societal objectives, research methods and data as well as expected research results and impact
- See guidelines on the abstract.
Public project description
- Maximum length 1,000 characters including spaces
- Popular and reader-friendly description of the research project in English and Finnish/Swedish.
- We will use the project description in our communications on the funded research project. It is important that the public description is written for a general audience. The description will also be stored at fi, a service that makes available information on scientific research conducted in Finland.
- Read the guidelines on the public project description.
Funding for the project
- The project’s funding follows the full cost model. The Research Council of Finland’s funding contribution to the research costs comes to no more than 70%.
- Before you can fill in the cost estimate, you must first select the site of research on the tab ‘General information’.
- The site of research maintains the following percentages: effective working hours, indirect employee costs, overheads percentage and VAT. The information is provided as percentages.
- Enter the funding period.
- Enter salaries and other costs.
- If you are applying for funding for your own salary, select ‘Principal investigator’ from the drop-down menu.
- Enter other funding sources and their funding contributions. You must immediately notify us if you receive funding from other sources for the same purpose after you have submitted your application to us.
- Justify the funding to be applied for by type of expenditure. The cost estimate must be realistic.
- Only under certain limitations and on justifiable grounds may the project PI’s salary for project management and/or research included in the application. The justifications are entered on the tab ‘Salary of principal investigator’ in the online services. Read more in the call text under ‘Funding to be applied for and funding period’.
- Consult the administration at your site of research when filling in budget details. Read more about the funding in the call text under ‘Funding to be applied for and funding period’.
- The commitment of the site of research is a requirement for the granting of funding. Make sure you have a commitment from your site of research (usually a university or research institute) to supporting the project. Read more on the commitment by the site of research.
Salary of principal investigator
- Justifications, if salary costs for PI are included in the funding plan
- The PI’s salary costs may, under certain limitations, be incorporated into the total project costs: for project management and/or research.
- If the PI does not have a permanent employment relationship for the duration of the funding period, include a salary plan for the PI covering the entire funding period
- Read more in the call text under ‘Funding to be applied for and funding period’.
Collaborators
- Project collaborators, itemised by collaborator (name, organisation, country)
- The application must name at least one international collaborator from at least one of the countries/regions/organisations specified in the call text under ‘Background and objectives’ (Europe, UK, Japan, Texas, Colorado, NASA). The research collaboration must make use of EuroHPC’s resources (European cooperation) or the LUMI supercomputer (UK, Japan, Texas, Colorado, NASA).
- Describe the collaborators’ roles and project-relevant key merits and provide justifications for choosing them in section 3.2 of the research plan.
- Applicants must append to their applications a letter of collaboration from the international collaborator, describing the use of HPC resources within the framework of the cooperation.
- Letters of collaboration must be appended before the call deadline. After the call deadline, we will consider supplemented information if it is possible in view of the review and decision-making process. Read more about the letter.
- As applications are reviewed by international experts, we recommended that you write the letters of collaboration in English.
Mobility
- Describe planned national and international mobility within the project, itemised by person.
- See more information on mobility.
- We recommend that applicants append a letter of collaboration to the application. Read more about the letter.
- As applications are reviewed by international experts, we recommended that you write the letters of collaboration in English.
Affiliations
- Use of research infrastructure: The research collaboration must make use of EuroHPC’s resources (European cooperation) or the LUMI supercomputer (UK, Japan, Texas, Colorado, NASA). Indicate what kinds of equipment, resources or data reserves provided by national or international research infrastructures the project plans to use. The menu includes infrastructures included in Finland’s national roadmap and/or ESFRI’s roadmap. Other possible infrastructures are entered in a free-text field. Learn more about research infrastructures.
- Part of a Finnish Centre of Excellence. Select from the options provided if the application is affiliated with an ongoing Centre of Excellence funded by the Research Council of Finland. Read more about Centres of Excellence.
- Part of a Finnish Flagship. Select from the options provided if the application is affiliated with the Research Council of Finland’s Finnish Flagship Programme. Read more about the Finnish Flagship Programme.
Research ethics
- Preliminary ethical review for project and/or animal testing permit (select yes/no)
- Found guilty of research misconduct (select yes/no). We will not consider (process) a funding application if the applicant has been found guilty of research misconduct in the three years preceding the year of the call.
- Guilty of illegal employment within the meaning referred to in section 7(2) of the Act on Discretionary Government Transfers (select yes/no)
- The research ethics description is entered under section 4 (Responsible science) of the research plan.
- Read more about research ethics.
Progress report
- If you have ongoing funding from us or completed projects for which a final report has not yet been submitted, you must prepare a progress report. This does not apply to applicants acting as the responsible person for an ongoing project in funding schemes where the funding recipient is an organisation or to applicants who are PIs for ongoing subprojects in consortia.
- This tab shows the projects to be reported on.
- Maximum length per project is 1,500 characters including spaces.
- Describe the progress and/or key achievements of the project and how the project is related to the funding being applied for.
- Read more about drafting the report.
- Also see the How-to guides for the online services.
Most relevant publications and other key outputs
- The PI/consortium PI enters up to ten of their own/the consortium’s own most important project-relevant publications and up to ten of their own/the consortium’s own research outputs, with justifications.
- You can retrieve publication details from the VIRTA publication information service. Also see our how-to guide for the online services.
- There are separate fields for selected publications and other research outputs. If the desired output type is not listed, select ‘Other, what?’ and enter the name of the output.
- Details on publications may also be entered manually. Obligatory information: author(s), title, year of publication, name of series/journal, type of publication (the type will not show in the PDF version of the application).
- Do not enter journal-based metrics on publications and research outputs. Read more about responsible researcher evaluation.
- The information is used to assess the competence of the applicant or consortium to carry out the project.
CV
- Maximum length three pages
- Write the CV on our template and append it as a PDF appendix on the dedicated tab in the online services.
Research plan
- Maximum length twelve pages, 15 pages for consortium projects
- Write the research plan on our template (Word) or (LaTeX) and append it as a PDF appendix on the dedicated tab in the online services.
- You must follow the given structure. Please use the headings provided.
- The application cannot be submitted if the system detects an error in the page configuration or the structure.
- See the how-to guides for the online services.
Other appendices
Appendices must be PDF files.
Obligatory appendices:
- Complete list of publications. Read the guidelines on the structure of the list of publications.
- Letter of collaboration. Read more about the letter. Applicants must append to their applications a letter of collaboration from the international collaborator, describing the use of HPC resources within the framework of the cooperation. Letters of collaboration must be appended before the call deadline. After the call deadline, we will consider supplemented information if it is possible in view of the review and decision-making process. As applications are reviewed by international experts, we recommended that you write the letters of collaboration in English.
Submit application
- You can submit the application when you have filled in or attached all the necessary information.
- The joint consortium application is submitted by the consortium PI. The person can submit the consortium application only after all subprojects have tagged their applications as complete.
- A red warning triangle on the tab tells you that some information is missing.
- You can supplement and edit the application until the deadline. Resaving will replace the earlier version.
- If you want to supplement the application after the deadline, please get in touch with the contact persons listed in the call text.
Authorisation
- You can authorise another person to supplement or view your application.
- You cannot authorise more than one person at a time to edit a field in your application, and you cannot edit that same field while the authorisation is active. Do not authorise yourself.
- Start by entering the person’s name in the field. If the person has an account in the online services (SARA), they can be selected from the list.
- The person must have an account in our online services (SARA).
- See technical instructions on the authorisation process in the how-to guides for the online services.
Research Council of Finland funding is granted based on peer review. We mainly use foreign experts as reviewers.
As a rule, the applications will be reviewed by an international panel. At least two individual reviews will be requested for applications with a subject that does not fit into the panel.
The fundamental principles of the review are transparency, integrity, equity, competence and diversity. Read more about responsible researcher evaluation.
Review criteria
- how the project supports the objectives of the call
- scientific quality, innovativeness and novelty value of the research as well as its impact within the scientific community
- feasibility of research plan (incl. responsible science)
- added value of collaboration between consortium parties
- competence of applicant/research team in terms of project implementation, possible researcher training
- Quality of research environment and collaboration networks (incl. researcher mobility).
See the rating scale and the review questions that will be used in the review: review form, review guidelines and review principles (PDF) for special funding for international collaboration in high-performance computing. The review guidelines and forms are only available in English.
The panel drafts one review report on each application. The review report is subject to professional secrecy. Applications that receive a final rating below 5 receive a brief panel summary on the application. The review panel will also rank the highest-rated applications.
The funding decisions are based on the review reports and panel rankings. Additionally, the decisions will be prepared considering the Research Council of Finland’s criteria for research funding decisions and other guiding policies. Read about how funding decisions are made.
The Research Council of Finland’s General Subcommittee will make the funding decisions in late 2024 based on the international review and the objectives set for the funding scheme (see ‘Background and objectives’).
The projects to be funded must combine the following aspects:
- utilising EuroHPC or the LUMI supercomputer in research
- international collaboration with research teams in the countries/regions specified under ‘Background and objectives’
- high-quality scientific research.
You will receive an email notification after the funding decision has been made. After receiving the email, you can log in to the online services with your user ID to view the decision and its justifications. In the online services, you will also have access to the review report(s), which may include the panel ranking (panels rank the best applications).
How to receive the funding
A positive funding decision is accompanied by the funding terms and conditions. If the funding is subject to conditions that differ from or specify the Research Council’s funding terms and conditions, these are indicated in the specific conditions of the decision notification.
Make sure to check the decision, read the funding terms and conditions and accept the funding in the online services without delay. This must be done within eight weeks of the decision date, unless otherwise stated in the special conditions of the decision notice.
If necessary, update the popular project description before you accept the funding. If a project is granted funding, we will publish a description of the project on our website. It is important that the public description is written for a general audience.
Make changes to the annual instalments, if necessary (see the instructions in our funding terms and conditions), and append the full data management plan (in consortium applications only consortium PIs do this).
Once you have accepted the funding, the system will send a notification to the commitment issuer at the site of research. That person must also accept the granted funding. See the how-to guide: Decision notification, review reports and accepting funding.
The funds can be paid only after the applicant and the representative of the site of research have accepted them. The system will then notify the funding to the finance administration of the site of research, whereupon the funds will be ready to use.
- Risto Vilkko, Senior Science Adviser
- Our email addresses are in the format firstname.lastname(at)aka.fi.
- Get in touch via our helpdesk (Division of Information Management) if you encounter technical issues in the online services.
- Our telephone number (switchboard) is +358 295 335 000.