SHARE
COPY LINK
For members

TODAY IN DENMARK

Today in Denmark: A roundup of the news on Monday

Tax rebates sent out to homeowners, stores report sales spike after government announcement, weather latest and more news from Denmark on Monday.

Today in Denmark: A roundup of the news on Monday
TOPSHOT - Denmark's midfielder #10 Christian Eriksen celebrates scoring his team's first goal during the UEFA Euro 2024 Group C football match between Slovenia and Denmark at the Stuttgart Arena in Stuttgart on June 16, 2024. Photo: Damien Meyer/AFP/Ritzau Scanpix

Homeowners to get billions in tax rebate 

The government agency responsible for assessing property tax, Vurderingsstyrelsen, has concluded that over 300,000 homes paid too much tax in the period 2011-2020 and will therefore receive a rebate.

The total value of the rebate is over five billion kroner and amounts to an average of 16,000 kroner per eligible home, Avisen Danmark reported.

“Homeowners who paid too much tax will be compensated with interest,” Tax Minister Jeppe Bruus told the media.

“Homeowners who didn’t pay enough will not get an extra bill,” he added.

Persons eligible to receive a refund will be informed by the authority. With assessments still ongoing, more rebates could be on the way, Bruus said.

Vocabulary: tilbagebetaling – repayment

Summer weather and up to 23 degrees Celsius later this week

There were some signs that the weather is getting into summer character with dry and warm spells interspersing the rain over the weekend.

Both hail and thunder will pass across Denmark this week, but warm summer weather is forecast to arrive later in the week.

“The week will start with both sun and showers. The showers on Monday afternoon could be very heavy, maybe with both hail and thunder, especially in Jutland,” meteorologist Anja Bodholdt of met office DMI told the Ritzau newswire.

“When we get to the middle of the week around Wednesday, it could start quite we on [eastern island] Bornholm, but apart from that a dry weather day awaits us with more space for the sun,2 she said.

“When we reach the end of the week we can look forward to some summery days when the sun will shine most places and it will stay dry,” with temperatures reaching up to 23 degrees, she said.

Denmark’s Eriksen glad for ‘very different’ Euros experience

Christian Eriksen said he had nothing other than football on his mind after scoring in Denmark’s 1-1 draw with Slovenia at Euro 2024 almost three years to the day since he suffered a cardiac arrest.

Eriksen put Denmark ahead in the first half of their Group C opener in Stuttgart on Sunday as the midfielder scored his first European Championship goal at his third tournament.

He featured at Euro 2012 and again at the Covid-delayed 2020 edition, where he collapsed during Denmark’s opening 1-0 loss to Finland and was resuscitated on the pitch with the aid of a defibrillator.

Eriksen, now 32, has said that fateful day in Copenhagen is one on which he no longer dwells too much.

“Luckily it’s been a lot of games since the last time and since it happened. I felt confident in playing again, so in that sense I was just happy to be back playing.”

Stores report explosion in sales after emergency advice to public

On Saturday, the Danish Emergency Management Service (Beredsskabstyrelsen, DEMA) issued advice for the general public to have certain supplies at home so that they are prepared in the event of a crisis or hybrid attack (meaning an attack from another country the targets cyber infrastructure).

We’ll have full details of this announcement, what has been recommended and what it means on our website today – look out for the separate article(s).

In the meantime, sales of items such as water containers, camping stoves and first aid boxes have spiked, media including broadcaster DR report.

Businesses such as outdoors specialist Spejder Sport said they has been inundated with orders and would increase their own orders from suppliers.

Member comments

Log in here to leave a comment.
Become a Member to leave a comment.
For members

TODAY IN DENMARK

Today in Denmark: A roundup of the news on Friday

Thousands of lightning strikes, shocking figure for child poverty in Copenhagen, Danish rider returns for Tour de France and more news from Denmark this Friday.

Today in Denmark: A roundup of the news on Friday

31,000 lightning strikes registered in Jutland

Thunderstorms across southern and western Jutland night brought over 31,000 lightning strikes in the region, broadcaster DR reports.

Residents in the area also report hailstones that, in a least one case, we big enough to rip through terrace roofing.

The storms signal the end of the hot weather spell this week, with more moderate temperatures forecast this weekend.

Vocabulary: lynnedslag – lightning strike

5,000 children ‘live in poverty’ in Copenhagen

As many as 5,000 children in Copenhagen live in poverty according to a new review from the city’s municipal Finance Committee (Økonomiudvalg).

Around half of the children live in the Brønshøj-Husum, Bispebjerg and Nørrebro districts. The number represents around five percent of the total number of children who live in the city.

More should be done to support charities that fight child poverty, Karina Vestergård Madsen, an elected municipal councillor said.

“What we need focus on is support for organisations in civil society like Save the Children and Mødrehjælpen who can give them some good experiences which they can’t afford,” she said to DR.

Vocabulary: fattigdom – poverty

Road-rusty Vingegaard set for Tour de France duel with rival Pogačar 

Two-time Danish Tour de France champion Jonas Vingegaard faces a serious challenge in the form of longstanding rival Tadej Pogačar when the tour sets off from the Italian city of Florence on Saturday.

Team Visma’s Vingegaard hasn’t raced since suffering multiple fractures in a fall in March but recently declared himself fit for the Tour, the biggest event in cycling.

Vingegaard’s fall offers Slovenia’s Pogačar a chance at revenge for the brutal manner in which the Dane crushed him on two Alpine stages late in the 2023 edition.

“I’ve tested my legs a little and to be honest, I’ve never felt so good on a bike,” Pogačar, a back-to-back winner in 2020 and 2021, told news agency AFP.

“Everyone thinks that I’m going to win the Tour every year, but I didn’t win the last two times,” he said.

Vocabulary: et styrt – a fall/crash (on a bike)

Blaze at Tax Ministry put out by firefighters

A fire at Denmark’s Tax Ministry yesterday was swiftly extinguished after the building was evacuated.

A fire broke out on during the morning on the roof of the building in central Copenhagen which houses Denmark’s Tax Ministry as well as some residential flats.

The building is located very close to the Old Stock Exchange (Børsen), which suffered a devastating fire earlier this year. The Tax Ministry building is a modern building, unlike the historic Børsen, and is on the opposite side of Copenhagen Harbour on Nicolai Eigtveds Gade.

READ ALSO: Why have there been so many fires in Copenhagen this year?

Vocabulary: den modsatte side – the opposite side

SHOW COMMENTS