Inside views
Meet Hydro from the inside and learn more about how trainees, employees and apprentices experience working in one of the largest aluminium companies in the world - from Kurri Kurri in Australia to Sunndalsøra in Norway.
-
A new international group of trainees with a world of energy and expectations is in place in Hydro. You can meet them here.
-
Four lucky students get a glimpse of life in Qatar, and got to know aluminium better.
-
The two trainees who started working at Sunndal in the early summer of 2007 represent the broad spectrum that Hydro is preparing for in its recruitment programme.
-
As a learning environment, Årdal and the technology centre are unique,” says Eirik R. Johnsen .
-
In Australia, Kristin Holmeide enjoys outdoor activities when not at work at Hydro's aluminium plant in Kurri Kurri.
-
Hydro is a company of possibilities. The longer I work in the company, the more fields I find interesting.
-
I started working for Hydro two years ago and recently I travelled to China to learn more about the production of alumina.
-
Stefan Lauvli Schley, initially thought he'd end up an engineer in the offshore industry. He ultimately decided aluminium was the best place to start his career.
-
In Sunndal 3 and 4, the aim is to have two apprentices on each shift – at all times. In recent years the plant has played a leading role in making it possible for apprentices who want to take a certificate of apprenticeship to do so.
-
Synnøve Brynjulfsen, thinks of both the indoor and outdoor environment. "Running a metal plant well - means smooth, reliable operations. A good metal plant that is run in an environmentally responsible way shouldn't provide 'heating for the crows.'"