The natural resources industries - oil, gas, energy, minerals and process production - are important contributors to the economies of Norway, Brazil and the USA. All three countries host firms that develop natural resources or build the plants and facilities that are needed to do this. These plants are expensive to design and build. We need to do this more effectively and for less money. These plants must meet requirements from governments, owners and the public. The plants must run efficiently, as designed, safely and reliably. At present these requirements are written down in documents: standards, contracts, procedures and specification. This makes it hard and expensive to check that what is built meets these requirements. Digitalization offers a new way of working that can improve efficiency and reduce costs. However, digitalization of the design and operation of plants needs a digital representation of requirements. DSYNE is a network of computer scientists and system engineers in Norway, USA and Brazil. They have been working on ways to digitalize requirements and exploit the power of computing in engineering and running plants like oil platforms, power stations, smelters and mines. International work is needed to avoid individual countries building their own, inconsistent ways of working with requirements. DSYNE provides resources for international collaboration and building understanding. The project finances three workshops, researcher exchanges and the development on common courses in Digital Requirements in System Engineering