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TODAY IN NORWAY

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

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

Today in Norway: A roundup of the latest news on Tuesday
The Geiranger fjord. Photo by Damir Spanic on Unsplash

Oslo City Council set to slash number of electric scooters 

The city council in Oslo will today decide to cut the number of rental electric scooters in the city following a surge in accidents

Oslo currently has more scooters per capita than anywhere else in Europe, with 200 per 10,000 inhabitants. In comparison, Stockholm had 125 electric scooters per resident while Berlin, Paris, and Rome were well below 50. 

Scooter numbers could be cut by as much as 68 percent. The city council is proposing a limit of 8,000 scooters in the city. There are currently more than 30,000. 

In addition to this, the city council will introduce a curfew and designated areas where users have to park the scooters once they are finished. 

Norwegian drug effective against Covid-19 

A drug produced by Norwegian biotechnology company Bergenbio has been tested on seriously ill Covid-19 patients and has been shown in a study to have good effects. 

The drug, bemcentinib, was tested on 179 patients in the UK, South Africa, and India. The survival rate of those treated with the medication was 96.6 percent compared to 91.2 percent without it.

In addition to this, fewer patients using the drug needed to be put on a ventilator and the likelihood of rapid recovery and discharge increased. 

Use of facemasks on public transport dropping 

Public transport company Ruter has said that the use of facemasks has dropped to around 80 percent in Oslo. 

The transport firm conducted random sampling on both busy and quiet public transport and found the use of masks dropped from almost 100 percent to 80 percent. 

“In recent weeks, we have seen that the use of facemasks has decreased somewhat. For example, the use of masks is down to 80 percent on departures with many travellers,” Knut-Martin Løken, press officer at Ruter, told state broadcaster NRK

Bjørn Iversen, a senior doctor with the Norwegian Institute of Public Health, said that the fall in people using masks is partly due to infections in Oslo being at their lowest for months, meaning people feel safer without a mask. 

NIPH redistributing vaccine orders 

The Norwegian Institute of Public Health has asked municipalities that either have a surplus of doses or are set to receive more shots than they need to give the health institute notice so it can redistribute them elsewhere. 

Municipalities are being asked to cancel orders rather than stockpile doses so that areas behind in their vaccine programs can use the re-routed jabs to catch up. 

READ ALSO: What do I need to know about my Covid-19 vaccine appointment in Norway?

In addition to this, some municipalities are now mixing mRNA vaccines (Pfizer and Moderna’s vaccines) to speed up the process. 

170 new Covid-19 infections

On Tuesday, 170 new Covid-19 infections were registered in Norway, eight less than the average for the past seven days. 

In Oslo, 26 coronavirus cases have been recorded. This is one less than the seven-day average for the capital. 

Number of reported Covid-19 cases in Norway. Source: NIPH

Member comments

  1. We are booked to come to Norway September 5 from the US. We are both fully vaccinated. Any hope that this will happen? We do have an electronic COVID vaccination passport from New York.

    Ellen

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For members

TODAY IN NORWAY

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

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

Pictured is Holmenkollen in Oslo.
Read about the interval between doses two and three being shortened and the death of Kåre Willoch in today's roundup of important news. Pictured is Holmenkollen in Oslo. Photo by Michael Ankes on Unsplash

Tributes paid to Kåre Willoch 

The former prime minister and Conservative Party leader Kåre Willoch passed away yesterday aged 93. King Harold, prime minister Jonas Gahr Støre and former PM Erna Solberg were among those to pay tribute to Willoch. 

“He was a very gracious and nice person who was concerned with people and political issues,” Solberg said. 

The former PM pointed to Willoch’s modernisation reform in Norway as his most significant political legacy. 

“The most important thing he did was the modernisation of Norway,” she said. 

Health minister to decide on new Covid-19 measures

New coronavirus measures are on their way in Norway, with the health minister, Ingvild Kjerkol, set to decide on new restrictions following a rise in infections, outbreaks of the Omicron variant and parts of the health service nearing capacity. 

“There will be measures we will notice in our everyday lives,” Kjerkol said to public broadcaster NRK

“The situation is demanding, and that is the reason why we are now looking at new measures. We have a health service that is in full swing, and our goal is to have control of the pandemic, in the form that the municipalities and hospitals are able to provide proper health care,” Kjerkol explained.

READ ALSO: How could Norway’s Covid-19 restrictions be tightened this week?

The minister didn’t reveal any details on what could be announced but said that decisions would be made on Tuesday. 

Coronavirus booster vaccine interval shortened 

The interval between vaccine doses two and three for those aged between 64 and 45 will be shortened by a month, Norway’s health ministry has announced

The interval will now be five months when it was previously six. All adults with serious underlying conditions and those working in the health and care sectors will also have the interval cut. 

One in three think Covid-19 measures are too relaxed

A third of Norwegians feel that the current Covid measures in place in Norway are insufficient and need tightening, according to a survey conducted by Norstat for public broadcaster NRK.

Ten percent said the measures were too comprehensive, and just under 50 percent said that the current level of action was appropriate. 

4,117 new Covid-19 cases in Norway

On Monday, 4,117 new Covid-19 cases were registered in Norway. That is 1,240 more cases than the same day last week. 

As of yesterday, 295 people were hospitalised with Covid-19. 

A graph showing the number of weekly cases in Norway.
The total number of weekly cases in Norway throughout the pandemic. Source: Norwegian Institute of Public Health.
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