SciTransfer
Organization

Ekoenergetyka - Polska Sp. z o.o.

Polish SME contributing industrial EMC expertise to European PhD training networks on electromagnetic interference and power applications.

Technology SMEenergyPLSMENo active H2020 projectsThin data (2/5)
H2020 projects
2
As coordinator
0
Total EC funding
Unique partners
24
What they do

Their core work

Ekoenergetyka is a Polish private company (SME) from Zielona Góra that contributed industry expertise to European electromagnetic compatibility (EMC) and electromagnetic interference (EMI) research. In both H2020 projects they participated as a third party in MSCA Innovative Training Networks — a role that typically means hosting PhD researcher secondments, providing real-world industrial testing environments, and supplying practical use cases to academic consortia. Their involvement in smart cities EMC (SCENT) and power-applications EMI (ETOPIA) indicates they operate in electro-technical fields where interference management is a live operational challenge. The company name — Ekoenergetyka, meaning eco-energy — points toward sustainable energy technology, likely power electronics or electrical infrastructure, where EMC compliance is a core engineering concern.

Core expertise

What they specialise in

2 projects

Both SCENT and ETOPIA are dedicated EMC/EMI training networks, and Ekoenergetyka is named as a third party in both, indicating sustained industrial relevance to this field.

EMI in Power Electronics Applicationssecondary
1 project

ETOPIA specifically targets 'EMI analysis and power Applications', suggesting the company brings hands-on experience with interference challenges in power systems.

Smart City Electrical Infrastructuresecondary
1 project

SCENT focuses on Smart Cities EMC training, linking Ekoenergetyka to urban electrical infrastructure contexts where distributed energy and charging systems generate interference.

Evolution & trajectory

How they've shifted over time

Early focus
Smart cities EMC training
Recent focus
EMI in power applications

With only two projects launched in 2018–2019 and sharing identical keywords, there is no meaningful keyword shift to analyze — electromagnetic interference remained the single consistent theme throughout their entire H2020 engagement. Both projects ran concurrently into 2022–2023, reinforcing a sustained and narrow specialization rather than a strategic pivot. If a direction exists, it is a subtle movement from smart-city EMC contexts (SCENT) toward power-electronics EMI analysis (ETOPIA), but the data is too thin to confirm this as a deliberate trend.

Their two overlapping MSCA-ITN engagements suggest a stable industrial identity built around electromagnetic compatibility, positioning them as a recurring industry host for EMC research networks rather than a company expanding into new technical domains.

Collaboration profile

How they like to work

Role: third_party_expertReach: European7 countries collaborated

Ekoenergetyka has participated exclusively as a third party — the industry partner role in MSCA training networks — rather than as a project coordinator or formal participant. This role typically involves hosting researcher secondments, providing access to operational infrastructure, and supplying industrial use cases without carrying administrative or scientific leadership responsibilities. Their presence across two large MSCA-ITN consortia (24 unique partners, 7 countries) shows openness to academic collaboration, though their footprint within each project is likely focused on specific, well-bounded industrial contributions.

Through two MSCA-ITN networks, Ekoenergetyka has built connections with 24 unique consortium partners across 7 countries. Their network is predominantly academic and research-oriented, reflecting the MSCA-ITN structure where universities form the core and companies participate as industry third parties.

Why partner with them

What sets them apart

As a Polish SME with documented involvement in EMC and EMI research environments, Ekoenergetyka occupies a niche position as an industry bridge between academic electromagnetic compatibility research and real-world power applications in Central Europe. Their participation in two concurrent PhD training networks signals willingness to engage with long-term research partnerships beyond transactional contracts. For consortium builders seeking a Polish industry partner with EMC testing or power-application expertise — particularly for MSCA or similar people-focused programmes — they represent a rare SME-level entry point into this technical domain.

Notable projects

Highlights from their portfolio

  • ETOPIA
    Directly targets PhD-level EMI analysis in power applications, making it the most technically specific project in their portfolio and the strongest indicator of their power electronics EMC credentials.
  • SCENT
    Focuses on Smart Cities EMC training, linking the company's expertise to urban electrical infrastructure — a context directly relevant to EV charging and distributed energy deployments.
Cross-sector capabilities
Smart city infrastructure (urban EMC and electrical grid systems)Digital and ICT (electromagnetic interference in connected and embedded devices)Manufacturing (power electronics testing and EMC compliance)
Analysis note: Only 2 projects, both as third party in MSCA-ITN training networks with no EC funding recorded. The third-party role is light-touch by design — actual expertise depth and operational scope cannot be confirmed from project metadata alone. The 'interference' keyword and project titles (EMC/EMI) provide directional signal, but the profile is necessarily cautious. The company name suggests a broader eco-energy or power sector orientation that is not directly evidenced in the project data.