
InCamS@BI - Innovation Campus for Sustainable Solutions
Circular Economy: Scientists from InCamS@BI support companies with their Technology Check on the path to sustainable business models.
Conserving resources, optimizing processes and reducing costs – circular value creation models have a good reputation, but are considered difficult to implement in practice...
Conserving resources, optimizing processes, and reducing costs – circular value creation models have a good reputation, but are considered difficult to implement in practice. The team behind the InCamS@BI transfer project – Innovation Campus for Sustainable Solutions – from HSBI and Bielefeld University aims to change this and offers companies direct support in taking their first steps toward sustainable transformation: "Technology Check" (TechCheck for short) is the name of the format developed by the interdisciplinary team, designed to support small and medium-sized plastics processing companies in the region as they embark on their journey into the world of circularity. Starting points can often be found in the smallest details, as a site visit to the company MS Protect demonstrates.
https://www.hsbi.de/presse/pressemitteilungen/circular-economy-wissenschaftlerinnen-von-incams-bi-unterstuetzen-unternehmen-mit-ihrem-technology-check-auf-dem-weg-zu-nachhaltigen-geschaeftsmodellen
Other news

Sustainability in professional sports: Arminia professional Maël Corboz wants to make OWL a model region together with Bielefeld University and the transfer project InCamS@BI.
Major sporting events and sustainability seem incompatible at first glance: Stadium sausages, energy for lighting and heating, or the arrival and departure of visitors consume enormous resources in a short time – every single week...
Innovative solutions against microplastics: HSBI meets start-up MicroBubbles from Bad Lippspringe in OWL
Tiny particles, big problem: Microplastics float in the air, drift in the oceans, and are even found in drinking water. These plastic particles are smaller than five millimeters and are considered dangerous for the environment and human health.