Norway’s Socialists say still oppose Arctic oil
OSLO (Reuters) – Norway’s Socialist Left party,
aiming to join a “Red-Green” government after a September
12
election, dismissed on Friday a report that it had dropped
opposition to oil and gas exploration in the Arctic.
“That’s nonsense and rubbish,” party leader Kristin
Halvorsen told Reuters of the report by NRK public
television.
“Oil and gas is one issue about which we will be
negotiating,” she said.
The Socialists argue that oil and gas exploration in the
Barents Sea will damage the fragile Arctic environment. But
they
are at odds with their Labour Party partners who favor
exploration and are likely to dominate the coalition
government.
Norway’s oil companies, led by Statoil and Norsk
Hydro, say they want to drill more in the northern
areas because discoveries are becoming scarce further
south.
NRK said in an unsourced report on Tuesday that the
Socialists were willing to give up their opposition to
Barents
drilling as part of a wider compromise to win power.
The Labour party is the dominant force in the “Red-Green”
coalition, which has a combined 87 seats in the 169-member
parliament. Labour has 61 seats, the Socialists 15 and the
Center party 11.
The three parties hope to work out common policies and form
a government in mid-October to replace the outgoing
centre-right
coalition of Prime Minister Kjell Magne Bondevik.
Oil and gas have been among the main points of controversy.
Norway is the world’s third-biggest oil exporter and
western
Europe’s biggest gas exporter.
