Electrification in action — industrial scale, real returns

Enerin will join the Industrial Heat Pump Conference as a Gold Sponsor at the Prague Congress Centre from Tuesday 4 to Wednesday 5 November 2025. The conference is organised by Tomas Caha and his team at Exergie.

As heat pump technologies advance at a remarkable speed, the Enerin team looks forward to connecting with partners, innovators, and industry leaders to explore one of the defining challenges of our time — how to electrify industry profitably and at scale.

At Enerin, we believe decarbonisation is a reality in motion. From our pioneering pilot sites at Pelagia (seafood), GE Healthcare (chemicals) and IVAR biogas plant, we are already demonstrating how industrial waste heat can be transformed into reliable, clean thermal power.

2026 will be a big year for us as we deliver our 1.2 megawatt machine at Roche Basel & Kaiseraugst site in Switzerland—an inspiration that global corporations are intent on achieving their net-zero CO2 emissions' energy goals.

Enerin’s patented technology, destined for scaled manufacturing, has been a core strategy since the company was founded in 2017. Enerin is optimising machine performance, modularity and faster payback targeting market penetration across industrial manufacturing sectors.

By partnering in key Norwegian and European projects at a highly innovative level, Enerin is able to achieve advances in component and design development, enhanced through R&D partnering offering modelling, simulation, validation and demonstration opportunities.

Enerin is at the forefront of machine retrofits combined with new technologies and designs for industrial purposes that target a higher replicability and affordability. CircleDRY, SUSHEAT, I-UPS and UP-FLEXH projects are examples of how innovative R&D aims to drive decarbonisation without the green premium.

Meet us in Prague and make sure to join our sessions:

  • Tuesday, 4 November, 13:30—14:30pm: Join Enerin CEO, Trond-Atle Asphjell, in the panel discussion on Decarb Industry with Thomas Fleckl, Austrian Institute of Technology, Miloslav Keltner, Ministry of Environment, Czech Republic, and Davide Rizzi, Turboden. Panel moderator, Sander Geelen from Geelen Counterflow, will lead the discussion on the importance of pioneering technically sound industrial heat pump designs that are ready for scale, and capable of overcoming short-term payback barriers. This will define the direction for decarbonising industrial process heat and cooling.

  • 5 November, 9.20am: Enerin CEO, Arne Hoeg, will present Enerin’s steam heat pumps on the main stage in the session dedicated to industrial steam. He will share updates and details from Enerin’s three full-scale pilot projects, our latest pipeline project, and share how Enerin will test and document performance using the simulated production data on SUSHEAT, including an update from CircleDRY.

  • Full programme HERE.

The HoegTemp

As our pilot projects testify, HoegTemp heat pumps handle the variations in factory process temperature and steam pressure demands. They are robust to sudden fluctuations, a reality in industry, and are able to supply the required steam temperatures and pressures in seconds and minutes.


While waste heat powers processes efficiently, HoegTemp has the unique ability to use multiple heat sources. Seawater, river water or air can be harnessed before waste heat is generated. This offers an opportunity for factories to start-up their processes using the same heat pump, and not a fossil boiler, as they wait for adequate levels of waste heat to be generated for thermal energy recycling.

By efficiently recycling steam and water across a range of temperatures, from -30 °C to 250 °C, Enerin’s Stirling heat pumps reduce water, chemicals and power use by reducing dependence on cooling towers—delivering sustainable operations and good returns.

The simple integration of the heat pump into the main heating system reduces investment and retrofitting costs. Flexibility to operate across a wide temperature range using multiple heat sources and excess renewables delivers cheaper integration with lower operating costs.

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