Norway’s Greenhouse Gas Emissions Rise, Despite Promised Cuts

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Oil and gas company Statoil gas processing and CO2 removal platform Sleipner T is pictured in the offshore near Stavanger, Norway, in this February 11, 2016 file photo. To match BRITAIN-EU/NORWAY REUTERS/Nerijus Adomaitis/Files
Oil and gas company Statoil gas processing and CO2 removal platform Sleipner T is pictured in the offshore near Stavanger, Norway, in this February 11, 2016 file photo. To match BRITAIN-EU/NORWAY REUTERS/Nerijus Adomaitis/Files

Norway’s greenhouse gas emissions rose by 1.5 percent last year, lifted by the oil and gas sector and industry, making it harder for Oslo to keep promises of deep cuts to limit global warming, official data showed.

Emissions rose to the equivalent of 53.9 million tonnes of carbon dioxide from 53.2 million in 2014, breaking several years of declines, and were above the 51.9 million in the benchmark year of 1990, preliminary Statistics Norway data showed.

In the oil and gas sector, BG Group’s new Knarr oilfield added most to emissions in 2015.

The rise makes the climate goals of the right-wing government’s ever tougher. Last year, Oslo said it would cut emissions by at least 40 percent by 2030 from 1990 levels as part of a UN agreement on climate change reached in Paris in December.

Many opposition politicians say the powerful oil and gas sector too often gets priority. Norway has often bought emissions quotas abroad to make up for a lack of progress in cutting domestic emissions.

On Wednesday, Norway awarded 10 oil licenses to energy companies in the Arctic, opening new acreage for exploration for the first time in two decades.

“Norway has an ambitious climate policy,” Environment Minister Vidar Helgesen said in a statement on Friday. “We have to prepare ourselves for more climate measures in future, especially within transport.”

Helgesen said emissions would be between 17 and 20 million tonnes higher by 2020 without existing measures such as penalties for carbon emissions that Norway was among the first to introduce in the 1990s.

Rising emissions could strain the ruling coalition. The small centrist Liberal Party, which usually supports the minority government to pass legislation in parliament, said more action was needed on climate change.

“The budget for 2017 that the government is now working on must be the best environmental and climate budget ever,” the NTB news agency quoted Liberal leader Trine Skei Grande as saying. “If not, this government has no future.”

Reuters

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