National Taipei University of Technology and Mean Well Co-organize Innovation Competition: 120 Teachers and Students Seek Sustainable Solutions
National Taipei University of Technology (NTUT) and Mean Well Group jointly organized the "Power Up! Smart Sustainable Technology Exhibition". Over 120 teachers and students participated in the 8-month competition, proposing technological solutions for sustainability issues. The finalists' works are currently on display at NTUT.
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- 📰 Published: May 2, 2026 at 12:21
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Central News Agency
(Central News Agency reporter Chen Chih-hsun, Taipei, 2nd) The "Power Up! Smart Sustainable Technology Exhibition," jointly organized by National Taipei University of Technology and Mean Well Group, saw over 120 teachers and students participate in an 8-month competition, collaboratively responding to sustainability issues with technological practice. The finalists' teams will exhibit their works at NTUT until the 28th of this month.
NTUT today issued a press release stating that at the opening ceremony of the "Power Up! Smart Sustainable Technology Exhibition" held yesterday (May 1st), President Jen Yi-chun and Mean Well Group founder Lin Kuo-tung attended together, witnessing the innovative achievements of the 13 university teams shortlisted for the finals, under three major themes: "Smart City," "Green Energy," and "Automated Equipment."
NTUT pointed out that this competition began soliciting entries from universities across Taiwan in September 2025, attracting over 120 teachers and students to form inter-school and interdisciplinary teams. Based on Mean Well's power modules, they creatively designed and integrated systems.
After 8 months of preliminary selection and practical finals, the top three works were "Smart Medical Care Energy Station" by National Taiwan University of Science and Technology, "Omni-directional Intelligent Environmental Response System" by Feng Chia University, and "Smart Agriculture Automated Irrigation and Monitoring System" by NTUT. The themes covered aspects such as smart healthcare, environmental response, and smart agriculture.
Mean Well Group founder Lin Kuo-tung stated that he hopes to connect academia, art, and public welfare organizations through the event to deepen the connection between society and sustainability, creating a better environment for the next generation. Wang Hsien-cheng, Mean Well's Chief Sustainability Officer, said that Mean Well has always hoped to respond to sustainable development goals with "power driving the force of good," and the students' works are the best manifestation of this creative energy.
NTUT President Jen Yi-chun stated that this exhibition is a rare interdisciplinary display platform combining electrical engineering, energy, automation, and corporate resources. Many works also incorporate AI (artificial intelligence) technology, echoing NTUT's direction in promoting AI education in recent years. The exhibition will continue until the 28th of this month, displayed in the Special Exhibition Hall of the NTUT History Museum, open for viewing from Monday to Friday. (Editor: Lee Heng-shan) 1150502
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(Central News Agency reporter Chen Chih-hsun, Taipei, 2nd) The "Power Up! Smart Sustainable Technology Exhibition," jointly organized by National Taipei University of Technology and Mean Well Group, saw over 120 teachers and students participate in an 8-month competition, collaboratively responding to sustainability issues with technological practice. The finalists' teams will exhibit their works at NTUT until the 28th of this month.
NTUT today issued a press release stating that at the opening ceremony of the "Power Up! Smart Sustainable Technology Exhibition" held yesterday (May 1st), President Jen Yi-chun and Mean Well Group founder Lin Kuo-tung attended together, witnessing the innovative achievements of the 13 university teams shortlisted for the finals, under three major themes: "Smart City," "Green Energy," and "Automated Equipment."
NTUT pointed out that this competition began soliciting entries from universities across Taiwan in September 2025, attracting over 120 teachers and students to form inter-school and interdisciplinary teams. Based on Mean Well's power modules, they creatively designed and integrated systems.
After 8 months of preliminary selection and practical finals, the top three works were "Smart Medical Care Energy Station" by National Taiwan University of Science and Technology, "Omni-directional Intelligent Environmental Response System" by Feng Chia University, and "Smart Agriculture Automated Irrigation and Monitoring System" by NTUT. The themes covered aspects such as smart healthcare, environmental response, and smart agriculture.
Mean Well Group founder Lin Kuo-tung stated that he hopes to connect academia, art, and public welfare organizations through the event to deepen the connection between society and sustainability, creating a better environment for the next generation. Wang Hsien-cheng, Mean Well's Chief Sustainability Officer, said that Mean Well has always hoped to respond to sustainable development goals with "power driving the force of good," and the students' works are the best manifestation of this creative energy.
NTUT President Jen Yi-chun stated that this exhibition is a rare interdisciplinary display platform combining electrical engineering, energy, automation, and corporate resources. Many works also incorporate AI (artificial intelligence) technology, echoing NTUT's direction in promoting AI education in recent years. The exhibition will continue until the 28th of this month, displayed in the Special Exhibition Hall of the NTUT History Museum, open for viewing from Monday to Friday. (Editor: Lee Heng-shan) 1150502
Stand with facts, your every sponsorship is the strength to protect press freedom.
Download the Central News Agency "First-Hand News" APP to stay updated with the latest news.
The text, images, and audio-visual content of this website may not be reproduced, publicly broadcast, publicly transmitted, or utilized without authorization.