Norwegians went to the polls on Monday in a parliamentary election as “Red-Green” opponents look to the future, which could affect the future of oil production for a major farmer in Western Europe.
The polling station opened at 9am (07:00 GMT) and the first pre-poll must be held at 9pm (19:00 GMT).
According to the survey, many appear to be pushing for the establishment of Prime Minister Erna Solberg, who has ruled the Nordic state for the past eight years.
The leader of the Labor Party in Norway, Jonas Gahr Store, a 61-year-old who has promoted social unrest, seems to have a good chance of success, but the form of the agreement needed to go to office has not yet been determined.
Its allies are the agrarian Center Party and the Socialist Left Party, but if they are unable to reach the majority on their own, they can rely on the support of the Green Party and / or the Red Communist Party, which could disrupt negotiations.
According to a survey between August 2 and September 11 and was published on Sunday by TV2, the three-party Store agreement was supposed to get 85 out of 169 seats in parliament, giving it the smallest number of people.
In the middle right he was seen picking up 67, while the Red Party is expected to take nine, and the Greens eight.
“I feel good,” the Store said as it cast its ballot at a school in Oslo on Sunday, voting to open the same day in major cities.
More than 1.6 million Norwegians, or 42.3% of the electorate, used the first opportunity to vote.
Eliminating the habit of alcoholism
August’s “code red red for human” report from the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) put the issue at the forefront of election negotiations and forced the country to consider oil for enrichment.
The report encouraged those who want to get rid of fat, left and, little by little, right.
The Green Party is monitoring the case by calling for a moratorium on oil exploration and the deadline for use by 2020.
This was rejected by the Store, a former foreign minister.
As a Conservative party, another political party in the country, Labor instead advocates a gradual withdrawal from oil.
The oil sector accounts for 14% of gross domestic product (GDP), as well as 40% of its exports and 160,000 jobs.
In addition, this herd has helped the world of 5.4 million people to earn the world’s largest income, today at a cost of about 12 trillion kroner (about 1.2 trillion euros or $ 1.4 trillion).
“Oil is in high demand. This is happening on its own, by market groups. We don’t need to order this … but instead build bridges for what lies ahead, “Espen Barth Eide chief of staff told AFP.
“We will continue to have oil events but we must acknowledge that the good years of oil are about to end,” he said.
Arctic exploration in question
According to many observers, the bait relies on the success of parties with natural interests and may include cutting off other waters to explore for oil, especially in the Arctic.
For voter Camilla Larsson, 33, the next government should reduce oil production to meet seasonal targets.
“It will be taxable, it will affect the way we live in Norway but … we have great opportunities and in terms of climate and lifestyle we have to give something to get something,” he said.
After eight years in power, as well as a number of challenges, including migration, lower oil prices and COVID-19, Solberg is expected to pass the baton.
“If you think things are going well in Norway, vote for the Conservative,” said the 60-year-old on Monday as he cast his ballot in his hometown of Bergen.
When asked what was next, the prominent leader said he was going home “empty-handed [her] suitcases “after seven weeks of campaigning and doing” clothes “.