Manila Bulletin

Oil-rich Norway struggles to beat its ‘petroholis­m’

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OSLO, Norway (AFP) — For climate reasons as much as economic prudence, Norway is trying to cut its dependence on oil, a godsend that has made the small Scandinavi­an country rich beyond its dreams – which is exactly what makes it hard to pass up.

‘Black gold’ has enabled Norway to build up the world’s largest sovereign wealth fund, currently worth close to $1.0 trillion. Yet several small political parties have raised their voices ahead of the country’s legislativ­e elections on Monday to make sure Norway puts its oil days behind it.

“We want the end of all new oil exploratio­n,” Rasmus Hansson, one of two co-leaders of the Greens Party, told AFP. “We will not support a government that doesn’t accept our ultimatum.”

The party, which according to several opinion polls could end up in the position of kingmaker, also wants to phase out Norway’s entire oil industry within 15 years.

A country of 5.3 million people, Norway has become very much aware of just how petroholic, or addicted to petrol, it is – especially since the recent drop in oil prices has erased 50,000 jobs from the industry.

“Winter is coming,” Norway’s central bank governor Oystein Olsen warned ominously in early 2016, borrowing a phrase from the popular television series Game of Thrones.

“The sharp fall in oil prices since summer 2014 will put the economy to the test in the period ahead.”

The gloomy prospect has highlighte­d the importance of a Norwegian “conversion” to new sources of income – to use a now-popular catchphras­e in the country.

But what could possibly replace the lucrative oil industry is the milliondol­lar question Norway is struggling to answer. Vague ideas have been floated, such as green energy and seafood, but nothing that is seen becoming the cash cow that oil is.

The 2015 Paris climate accord has meanwhile raised further awareness about the need to reduce greenhouse gas emissions.

“Planet Earth cannot support any more oil activities. In addition, these would only increase the uncertaint­y surroundin­g the Norwegian economy and jobs,” Hansson said, pointing to the prospect of the oil and gas industry being overtaken by renewable energies.

To counter the drop in the oil price, Norway has slashed its key interest rate to a record low and adopted an expansiona­ry budget policy. The rightwing government even tapped into the sovereign wealth fund for the first time last year.

Surprising­ly, winter seems to have already departed – at least judging by the latest growth figures: 0.7 percent in both the first and second quarters.

And with it, the sense of urgency to transform the economy.

“The oil crisis is over, it wasn’t as expensive and harsh as we thought it would be,” noted Nordea economist Erik Bruce. “The conversion from oil activities to new activities will surely proceed more slowly now,” he predicted.

According to a poll published at the end of August, 70 percent of Norwegians think it is important to preserve the country’s oil and gas industry, while only 16 percent disagree.

The two main political parties, the ruling Conservati­ves and the opposition Labour, have both rejected the Green Party’s ultimatum, even though both need to seek out allies to form a government.

The two parties see no reason to deprive themselves of an asset that still accounts for 12 percent of gross domestic product and 36 percent of exports.

And even though Norway’s crude oil production has been halved since 2001, finding alternativ­es as lucrative as oil is difficult.

The government of Conservati­ve Prime Minister Erna Solberg has long hammered home the need for a “conversion” – all the while opening up new swathes of the Arctic to oil prospectin­g, in a bid to compensate for shrinking North Sea fields.

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