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Today in Norway: A roundup of the latest news on Thursday

Find out what’s going on in Norway on Thursday with The Local’s short roundup of important news.

Today in Norway: A roundup of the latest news on Thursday
Øvre Slottsgate, Oslo, where shops will be back open. Photo by Eirik Skarstein on Unsplash

Oslo relaxes Covid-19 restrictions today with shops and malls to reopen

Retail and shopping reopen in Oslo after being closed since March 2nd.

This is part of the Norwegian capitals phased approach to the second step of its five-step plan for reopening and relaxing coronavirus measures.

The rest of the measures mentioned, such as bars, restaurants and gyms, will reopen later in May, around the 20th.

READ MORE: Oslo relaxes Covid restrictions with shops and malls to reopen

“I am pretty sure that the population of Oslo does not want us to take big risks with the reopening,” Mayor Raymond Johansen said.

Six out of ten believe the ‘coronavirus certificate’ is a good idea

Six out of ten people in Norway believe that fully vaccinated people should receive a vaccine passport or coronavirus certificate with benefits, according to a survey from Opinion.

The data collection firm asked 3,200 people if they think people who have had both doses of a vaccine in Norway should have access to perks such as travelling without quarantine, going to the cinema, attending large events and night clubs.

READ MORE: ‘Covid certificates’:Norway reveals plans to give people more freedoms

59 percent of those polled were in favour of the certificate being used to exempt people from Covid-19 restrictions, 25 percent were against this, and the rest were unsure.

A digital Covid-19 certificate. Source: helsenorge.no

“There is still a lot of uncertainty about what this will actually mean, but most people are positive,” senior adviser at Opinion, Nora Clausen, said.

Those under the age of 40 were the highest proportion of people against the certificates, about one in three in this age group said they were opposed to the Covid-19 certificate.

Google has fixed a privacy vulnerability with Norway’s infection tracking app

Smittestopp and other apps that use Googles’s infection tracking system have been affected by a vulnerability on Android phones.

According to the Norwegian Institute of Public Health (NIPH), the error has now been fixed.

“We received an email from Google yesterday that said that they have corrected the error and that a fix has been rolled out to 98 percent of users. We will be following the situation closely in the next few days so that we can be adamant the fix has worked,” Pål Solerød, IT manager at the NIPH, said in a statement.

The error allowed other app providers and network providers to access users data.

Trade union sells 52 million kroner worth of holiday properties

The Electricity and IT Association has sold its leisure properties, 15 shoreline cabins for around 52 million kroner.

The properties are in the Frogn municipality, about half an hours drive from Oslo. The land comes with 340 metres of shoreline and its own pier.

469 cases of infection in Norway
On Wednesday, 469 new cases of coronavirus were registered in Norway.

This is an increase of 76 cases compared to the seven-day rolling average, which is 393.

Cases are down by 15 compared to Tuesday, when 484 cases were recorded.

The R-number or reproduction rate in Norway is currently 0.7. This means that the pandemic is receding in Norway as for every ten people that are infected, they will, on average, only infect another seven people.

Total number of daily cases in Norway since the pandemic began. Source: NIPH

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RENTING

Rental prices in Norway’s biggest cities continue to rise

The cost of renting in Norway's four largest cities rose overall during the third quarter, with prices up six percent this year, figures from Real Estate Norway show. 

Rental prices in Norway's biggest cities continue to rise

A sharp increase in rent prices in Norway continued throughout the third quarter, figures from Real Estate Norway (Eiendom Norge) released on Tuesday show. 

“Real Estate Norway’s rental housing price statistics show a historically strong rise in rental housing prices in Norway in the third quarter,” Henning Lauridsen, CEO of Real Estate Norway, stated in a report on the latest figures. 

Growth was most robust in Stavanger and Oslo, according to Real Estate Norway. 

“The strong growth in rental prices we have seen in the wake of the pandemic continued in the third quarter, and it is particularly in the Stavanger region and in Oslo that the growth in rental prices is strong,” Lauridsen said. 

Stavanger and nearby Sandnes saw the largest price increases, with the cost of renting there increasing by 4.7 percent during the third quarter. During the same period, rents in Oslo increased by 2.5 percent, while a marginal 0.3 percent rise was recorded in Trondheim. 

While the cost of renting in Norway’s four largest cities overall increased by 2 percent, rental prices in Bergen declined. There, rents fell by 2.5 percent in the third quarter.

Lauridsen said that the increase in rental prices was likely to continue due to several factors. High inflation, interest rates, increased taxes on rental properties and a low supply of homes on the market all contributed to increasing rents. 

However, he did note that the supply of rental homes on the market had increased in Trondheim and Oslo since the summer. 

Lauridsen said that the least well-off financially were being hit hardest by rent rises. Previously, the Norwegian government has informed The Local that it will not introduce a temporary cap on rent increases. 

READ MORE: Norway’s government rules out a temporary rent cap

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