"Threats, accidents and natural disasters are not related to state borders and you need tools adapted to this. The joining of the two emergency networks is important for our common ability to manage crises on both sides of the border," Norwegian Justice and Emergency Minister Anders Anundsen said, as quoted by Norwegian newspaper Nettavisen.
"Sometimes it can virtually take forever because the communication occurs in several stages," Niclas von Essen, the head of the technology department at Jämtland County Rescue Association, said, as quoted by Swedish newspaper Helsinborgs Dagblad.
Norway and Sweden share Scandinavia's longest border of 1,630 kilometers. The two Nordic countries, which for almost a century were parts of the United Kingdoms of Sweden and Norway between 1814 and 1905, have a long tradition of cross-border cooperation.
Efforts to connect the two national emergency networks are parts of the partnership between the Norwegian Directorate for Emergency Communication (DNK) and the Swedish Civil Contingencies Agency (MSB) that is implemented within the framework of the EU-supported ISITEP program.