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TODAY IN NORWAY

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

Fatal traffic accidents, a Covid cash row and projects facing postponements are among the main stories from Norway on Monday. 

A lakeside cabin in Norway.
Read about a Covid cash row, several deaths on Norwegian roads and more in today's roundup of important news. Photo by Maarten Zuidhoorn on Unsplash.

Several dead after traffic accidents

Four people died, and two were flown to hospital following an accident in the Steigen tunnel, Nordland, north Norway, on Sunday afternoon.

 Another two died in an accident in Voss earlier on Sunday. Four people involved in the collision were sent to hospital. 

“We are at full speed into the season where there are usually more fatal accidents than in other periods of the year,” Cecilie Bryner from Trygg Trafikk, which promotes safe driving, said to newswire NTB. 

37 people have lost their lives on Norwegian roads so far this year. Last year, 87 died in accidents. 

Deadline for agricultural settlement

The deadline for the state and agricultural sector to agree on subsidies and funding is today. 

The farmers demand 11.5 billion kroner from the government, while the state has only offered 10.15 billion. 

The two parties have remained tight-lipped on how close they are to a possible agreement or what’s being negotiated.

This year’s settlement is considered far more complicated than during a typical year. The agreement is supposed to cover farmers’ incomes for 2023 and cover the cost of soaring prices and inflation in 2022, agricultural paper Nationen writes. 

Norway’s municipalities in Covid cash row 

A row has erupted between the government and Norwegian municipalities as funding promised to help cover the bill for Covid to local authorities was not included in the revised national budget for 2022, public broadcaster NRK reports

Several municipalities have hit out at the government as a result. 

Norway’s Minister of Local Government, Sigbjørn Gjelsvik, defended the budget and said there wasn’t a cash flow problem in Norwegian municipalities and that things should “happen in the right order”. 

This opens the door for compensation to be agreed upon after a report on Covid expenditure is published in September. 

READ MORE: What the revised national budget in Norway means for foreigners

Road projects could be pushed back 

Transport Minister Jon-Ivar Nygård has said that less money will be spent on road construction next year and that large national projects could be put on hold or scaled back. 

“We will need to review our priorities because there will probably be less money than planned for transport,” Nygård told newspaper VG

The minister didn’t say which projects were most likely to be put on the backburner, but it was most likely those that were still in the planning and preparation stages.

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TODAY IN NORWAY

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

Risk of airport strikes in Norway, house prices increase, and employers less optimistic. This and other news from Norway on Tuesday. 

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

Risk of strikes in aviation 

Talks between the union LO Stat and the employer organisation Spekter have broken off, which means that state-owned airport operator Avinor could see staff head out on strike over wages. 

“We have come a long way, but now the Riksmekleren (national mediator) will be next. The distance is too great, and the willingness to negotiate is too little. We have experienced attacks on accumulated rights, and that agreements entered into are not followed up,” Lise Olsen from LO Stat said in a statement. 

Therefore, up to 900 employees could go on strike if mediation fails to reach an agreement. No date has been set for the mediation process. 

Norwegian employers less optimistic

Employers have their lowest expectations for the future for at least eight years, according to figures from the Norwegian Labour and Welfare Administration (NAV). 

Far fewer companies anticipate taking on more staff next year, according to an annual survey from NAV. 

Only one in ten companies was expecting the number of employees to increase. 

Companies also said that finding qualified candidates had become less of a problem in 2024 than it had been previously. 

The shortage of workers in Norway has fallen from around 70,000 to 43,600. 

The state makes offer to farmers 

The state has offered 2.62 billion kroner in the agricultural settlement, which is an increase in income of around 70,000 kroner per man year. However, it is still well short of farmers’ demands of 3.9 billion kroner. 

“The state is delivering a good offer today that follows up on the Storting (Norwegian parliament) report on increased self-sufficiency and income escalation. The offer shows that the escalation plan is being followed, and it is planned to close a third of the income gap already in this year’s offer,” Viil Søyland, chief negotiator for the state, said. 

Due to a demanding situation for farmers, the government needed to do more to plug an income gap, according to Bjørn Gimming, head of the farmers’ union and leading negotiations for the agricultural sector. 

House prices in Norway rose in April 

House prices rose by 1.2 percent last month, and the average price of a home was 4.7 million kroner at the end of last month, according to figures from Real Estate Norway. 

In April, 9,942 homes were sold in Norway, a 40 percent increase from the previous year. 

“A large number of homes were both sold and advertised in April, and we had a real spring flood in the housing market in April,” Henning Lauridsen, CEO of Real Estate Norway, said. 

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