Ida Norström launches own electricity firm after ideas rejected

Ida Norström now runs a profitable electricity company with eight employees. She founded Energy Effective Solutions at age 20 after feeling sidelined in the industry.

Ida Norström gained her first taste of running a business during high school on the electricity and energy programme in Strängnäs. There she operated a UF company as part of her studies.

After graduation she worked two years in the electricity sector. She felt her ideas were not taken seriously by older male colleagues and decided to start her own firm.

Energy Effective Solutions was founded in 2019 together with Staffan Schager. It supplies green solutions such as solar panels and electric vehicle chargers around the Mälardalen region. In 2024 the company reported turnover of 22.3 million kronor and a profit of 1.7 million kronor.

“I never doubted that it would work,” says Ida Norström. She hopes more young women will dare to enter the crafts sector.

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Ebba Busch criticizing EU commissioner on energy issues with power infrastructure visuals
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Ebba Busch criticizes EU commissioner over bottleneck revenues

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Energy Minister Ebba Busch (KD) launches a sharp attack on EU Energy Commissioner Dan Jørgensen in the dispute over Swedish bottleneck revenues. She recently paused the expansion of a power cable to Denmark.

Ida Svensson, 18, from Ludvika, is one of Sweden's top three high school students in retail sales and a strong medal contender for Dalarna at Yrkes-SM. She competes in world-class service and sales, far from traditional crafts like welding. While classmates prepare for graduation, Ida aims for the championships first.

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Frida Waldenlöv and Dylan Zahir from Örebro won Emax 2026. The competition had 100 participants resulting in four winners.

A man in Umeå has been sentenced to a conditional term and over 300,000 kronor in damages for stealing electricity to his villa for several years. The ruling followed Umeå Energi's discovery of major power losses using new technology.

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Hitachi Energy is expanding its operations in Ludvika, prompting a significant increase in heavy rail transports. Representatives from the company, Trafikverket, and several municipalities recently met at bangården Hagen to address future transport challenges. CEO Tobias Hansson is convinced a solution is within reach.

The Wallenberg family is set to become the largest owner in the struggling steel company Stegra, Dagens industri reports citing multiple sources. Investors are providing 15 billion kronor to rescue the green steel project, with the Wallenberg sphere covering half. Lenders will release nearly 10 billion kronor in previously frozen loans.

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