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Bees Against Honey? Major EU Petroleum Producer Opposes High Oil Prices

© AFP 2023 / MARCEL MOCHETA worker on board the Bourbon Orca tug boat looks at the sea as they prepare to unload drilling equipment for an oil in the Norwegian sea (File)
A worker on board the Bourbon Orca tug boat looks at the sea as they prepare to unload drilling equipment for an oil in the Norwegian sea (File) - Sputnik International
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The slump in oil prices has been a dramatic setback for oil-rich Norway, one of Europe's biggest oil producers. Nevertheless, the Nordic country's industrial sector would rather have a weak krone than an oil price of $100 per barrel or more.

A worker is pictured on May 29, 2009 at the Mongstad oil refinery in western Norway, the most polluting of the country. The refinery chimneys belch out 1,7 million tonnes of carbon dioxide into the air per year, yet with the new pilot system of channeling the carbon dioxide, set for 2011, it may greatly contribute to the fight against global warming. - Sputnik International
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The oil crisis has been a mixed blessing for Norway. While its oil industry has been paralyzed by the recession, with tens of thousands of jobs lost and numerous oil rigs running idle, other industries have been thriving. The humbly-priced Norwegian krone has made Norwegian salmon, underwater missiles and armchairs especially competitive, the Norwegian daily Aftenposten reported.

Norwegian manufacturers would prefer a continually weak krone to oil prices of $100 and over. High currency valuations would make Norwegian goods less competitive, Knut Sunde, director of the Federation of Norwegian Industries (NI), told Aftenposten.

"In the wake of the decline of the price of oil, we've got ourselves an exchange rate that has been very pleasant for industry. In isolation, this has boosted competitiveness and profitability," Knut Sunde said.

In recent years, Norwegian export companies have experienced an unprecedented price due to the bullish Norwegian kroner. Many Norwegian export companies find foreign trade figures from Statistics Norway (SSB) affirming. At the height of the financial crisis of 2009, merchandise exports from the country totaled 305 billion NOK ($36.7bln), only to rise by a third to 404 billion NOK ($48.7bln) in 2015 due to the marked deprecation of the krone, which lost 17.5 percent between 2013 and 2015.

"The underlying effects of the weak krone are positive. About 85 percent of our production is exported, and a weak krone therefore strengthens our competitiveness," Olav Holst-Dyrnes, CEO of the country's largest furniture manufacturer Ekornes told Aftenposten.

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Last year, though, saw the upward trend reverse, as the export of goods from Norway sank to 387 billion NOK ($46.6bln), which resulted in a weak year following two phenomenal ones. Today, the picture has become even more ambiguous, with many branches experiencing decline and returning to the export volumes of the crisis years. Only tourism has managed to exploit the weak krone to create significantly higher activity and employment, Øystein Olsen, Governor of the Central Bank of Norway, told Aftenposten.

"In the long term, we must nurture greater competitiveness apart from oil business," Øystein Olsen said in his annual speech, as quoted by Aftenposten.

Nevertheless, Knut Sunde argued that the krone is still at a satisfactory level, which is handy for basically all Norwegian industries with the natural exception of oil-reliant western Norway, where tens of thousands of jobs have disappeared.

At present, exports of oil and gas amount to approximately 47 percent of the total value of Norway's exports of goods. Exports of natural gas increased marginally in 2016. However, the export revenues decreased compared to 2015. Oil exports increased for the third consecutive year, yet yielded decreased export values compared to 2015 because of lower average prices.

 

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