The Week

Norway: climate hypocrite?

The Scandinavi­an nation has world-beating green credential­s – but it is also a fossil fuel giant

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How green is Norway?

In many ways, exceptiona­lly so. About 95% of its electricit­y comes from hydropower, and nearly all the rest from other renewables such as thermal and wind. It has the highest per capita use of electric cars of any country in the world: in September, a whopping 77.5% of new cars sold there were electric. The capital Oslo has been redesigned to remove parking spaces and to encourage walking and cycling. Norway was one of the first nations to introduce a carbon tax, which is expected to raise over £500m in 2021. It was also the world’s first industrial­ised nation to ratify the Paris Agreement aimed at keeping global warming well below 2°C above pre-industrial levels, and, in 2016, its parliament agreed on a goal to cut the country’s net greenhouse gas emissions to zero by 2030. Yet at the same time, paradoxica­lly, Norway benefits from a big oil and gas industry.

How big exactly?

Huge, particular­ly relative to its population of only 5.4 million. Norway is Europe’s second-largest oil and gas producer, behind only Russia, producing four million “barrels of oil equivalent” per day. It provides about a quarter of the EU’s gas imports. The industry is the nation’s top moneymaker, accounting for around 14% of its GDP and 40% of its exports. It employs some 200,000 people (over 5% of the total workforce). Norway’s sovereign wealth fund, set up 30 years ago in order to invest North Sea oil profits, is now the world’s largest: it is worth $1.4trn, and owns on average 1.4% of every single listed company in the world. Norway is, Time magazine declared, “the most fossil fueldepend­ent industrial­ised democracy in the world”.

Why is this in the news now?

Partly because, at this year’s general election, the issue dominated the agenda: smaller parties on the Left such as the Green party wanted an immediate halt to oil and gas exploratio­n. And partly because of Cop26 – where Norway won the inaugural “Fossil of the Day” award from the Climate Action Network. The group complained that the Norwegian government “likes to play the climate champion” while behind closed doors it is a “fossil fuel cheerleade­r”; that it lobbies for the oil and gas industry, arguing in favour of drilling in the Arctic; and that it has consistent­ly failed to meet its climate targets. On current trends it will cut carbon emissions by, at best, only 21% on

1990 levels by 2030.

How does it justify its position?

Traditiona­lly, Norway has dealt with its climate and oil policies separately. This was made easier since, convenient­ly, under the Paris Agreement, emissions are counted where fossil fuels are consumed, not where they are extracted. So even though the oil and gas exported from Norway last year would emit about 450 million tons of carbon dioxide if burnt (about nine times the nation’s total annual emissions), it could remain a carbon exporter on this scale and still technicall­y cut its emissions to net zero. Norway’s two main political parties, Labour and the Conservati­ves, both take the view that it would actually be bad for the global environmen­t if Norway stopped producing oil and gas.

How does that argument work?

Norway’s drilling operations are said to be the cleanest in the world. If these are stopped, it’s argued, global demand would stay the same but Norway’s cleaner oil and gas would be replaced by dirtier products with higher emissions. In a punchy defence of the industry, the new Labour prime minister, Jonas Gahr Støre, said that a rapid end to Norwegian hydrocarbo­n production “would put a stop to an industrial transition that is needed” if Europe is to reach its green goals. As the world cuts out coal and oil to reduce emissions it will have to rely more and more on natural gas; and geopolitic­ally, without Norway, Europe would grow increasing­ly dependent on Vladimir Putin’s Russia.

Is the oil industry controvers­ial in Norway?

It is widely criticised. In Norway’s media, there are frequent references to oljeskam: “oil shame”, a concept derived from the Swedish idea of “flight shame”. Many Norwegians, particular­ly young people, would like to wean their country off oil. Campaigner­s have launched court cases against the government for failing to curtail exploratio­n. Yet polls show that just over half of people in Norway still support the industry. Fossil fuels, after all, have helped turn the country into one of the richest in the world (it has the 11th-highest global GDP per capita according to the World Bank). This year, the government expects to get more than $20bn from oil taxes, fees and dividends. Most of this goes into the national budget, supporting a lavish welfare state. The rest will go into the sovereign wealth fund, for a rainy day.

What will happen in the future?

After a dip at the beginning of the century, Norway has been ramping up oil production. In 2019, some 57 exploratio­n wells were drilled, and a record-breaking 83 new production licences were issued. The new centre-left government has said that it will seek to grow the oil and gas industry while striving to cut carbon emissions by, for instance, electrifyi­ng oil platforms. It also aims to use oil money to “finance a green transition”, notably by developing carbon capture and storage, and blue hydrogen (hydrogen produced from fossil fuels while capturing carbon emissions). Both technologi­es have great potential, but neither are remotely ready to be used at scale. The world as a whole is facing a colossal “production gap”: a discrepanc­y between government­s’ planned fossil fuel production, and the levels needed to keep global temperatur­es rises well below 2°C. And most nations have yet to align their green ambitions with reality. Norway, though, faces this contradict­ion in a particular­ly acute form.

 ?? ?? An Equinor platform at Oseberg field: clean drilling
An Equinor platform at Oseberg field: clean drilling

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