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Lecture

Radio amateurs


When crises strike and mobile networks or the internet go down, a fundamental question becomes acute — how will important information get through when society needs it most? Amateur radio may be the answer.

With simple and reliable technology, they can assist emergency services and authorities with communications when public telecommunications systems fail, and ensure that essential information continues to flow. Amateur radio is used all over the world as emergency communications during natural disasters and major accidents where ordinary communications break down.

In Norway, this preparedness is organized through the NRRL Liaison Service, which consists of over forty groups spread across the country. Radio amateurs play an important role when telephony and internet are down.

Radio amateurs play an important role when telephony and the internet are down, using robust, independent radio technology. With their own equipment, they can establish contact under demanding conditions and ensure communication when other communication lines are unavailable. The lecture takes as its starting point recent events, highlights the radio amateurs' emergency preparedness agreements and infrastructure, and shows why "old-fashioned radio" is still an important emergency resource.

Foredragsholder Carl Georg Abel (f. 1957) er fagleder for beredskap i radioamatørenes sambandstjeneste og har lang erfaring med sikkerhet og beredskap, blant annet over 20 år i NVE.

Registration and information

Arrangementet er gratis og det blir enkel servering i museets kafé fra kl. 16 for de som har forhåndspåmeldt seg.


Feb 26, 5:00 PM–6:00 PM

Carl Georg Abel

The Norwegian Museum of Science and Technology


Norway's National Museum of Technology, Industry, Science and Medicine. Here you will find exciting exhibitions and activities a short distance from central Oslo.

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