The Carl von Ossietzky University of Oldenburg located in Oldenburg, Germany was founded in 1973, making it one of Germany‘s young universities. It is one of the most significant and well-respected educational institutions in northwest Germany, specializing in multidisciplinary sustainable development studies and renewable energy studies with a particular emphasis on solar and wind energy. The main campus, Uhlhornsweg, houses the mensa, the administration, and the majority of the departments. The site is divided into two halves.
A total of 16,000 students are being prepared for the workforce at the University of Oldenburg. It offers a wide variety of academic fields, including linguistic, cultural, and humanities studies, educational sciences, art and musicology, economic and social sciences, mathematics, computer science, scientific sciences, and the new medical and health science programs that were launched in 2012.
Its objective is to use cutting-edge, multidisciplinary research to develop solutions to the significant problems society is facing in the twenty-first century. In the fields of research, teaching, culture, and business, the University collaborates closely with more than 200 other universities across the world. It is also connected with non-university institutes.
The University of Oldenburg enrolls approximately 16,000 students, more than 1,000 of them are international students from more than 50 various countries. The university takes part in ERASMUS, a collaboration for student exchanges in Europe. It has ongoing collaboration relationships with 105 universities across 44 nations.