Two years after Covid all but put a halt to NORA’s work, we were able to return to a normal activity level in 2022.
NORA made DKK 5 million in grants to 13 external projects in 2022, and we had 36 active projects in our portfolio at the end of the year. The Nordic Council of Ministers’ Vision 2030 for a green, competitive and socially sustainable Nordic region guides us not just in our grant-making to external projects, but also in the activities we put on. In 2022, 10% of our external grants went to projects related to the green transition, 56% of funding went to projects related to competitiveness and 34% to social sustainability.
The agenda-setting and alliance-building aspect of NORA’s work encompassed several activities in 2022. NORA organised a side-event during the UNLEASH conference in Nuuk in order to introduce ourselves to the young people of the North Atlantic region. This saw NORA and the NORA Committee hold a North Atlantic youth meet at the start of December. Participants contributed their ideas about how to strengthen relations among the region’s young people, and what they would like to see these relations lead to. The committee has earmarked funding to hold a follow up event.
NORA, together with members of our network, held three break-out sessions during the Arctic Circle conference in Reykjavík focusing on ocean energy, ocean biomass and settlement in remote areas..
NORA is involved in constructive talks with the Orkney Islands Council to begin working together on individual projects. The approach holds considerable appeal and could be ground-breaking for NORA, since one of the potential elements is a financial mechanism for establishing co-financed projects. Discussions with the Orkney Islands Council will continue in 2023. NORA is also interested in involving Shetland and the Hebrides in our activities.
In 2023, NORA will be chaired by Iceland. NORA’s action plan reflects the chairmanship’s focus on investments in blue bioeconomy and young people, and we expect this will make for an exciting year. For more information, please refer to our action plan at nora.fo.
For a number of years, NORA has actively participated in Arctic Circle Conference in Reykjavik. Here we have regularly participated in and organized several events in both plenary and side events. In 2021, NORA participated in a panel meeting on the blue bioeconomy, and NORA contributed with perspectives on future relations in the North Atlantic to a session organized by the West Nordic Council.
Already long-reliant on the wind and the consistent ocean current and tides, the northern North Atlantic is perhaps an ideal place to start for those seeking to tap into the forces of nature to power our society.
To find out how the wind and waves can be harnessed— as well as to underscore the region’s potential as a lab where tomorrow’s ocean-energy technologies can see the light of day — NORA, together with Nordic Energy Research and the Faroese Environment Agency, co-organised the Ocean Energy: A Vital Future Source panel at the 2022 Arctic Circle Assembly in Reykjavík, Iceland.
During the opening of the annual conference, Bárður á Steig Nielsen, the premier of the Faroe Islands, delivered an address in which he underscored that his country now considered sustainable growth as the only form of real growth.
Echoing that sentiment, Klaus Skytte, the chief executive of Nordic Energy Research, noted that the well-attended session was reflective of the great interest in energy in the North Atlantic and Nordic regions.
“The Faroe Islands, Iceland and Greenland have large energy resources and a unique opportunity to show how the green transition in the Arctic region can be sustainably achieved,” he said.
Speakers during the session and their topics included:
Gavin Mackay, Highlands and Islands Enterprise: Scottish Offshore Wind Overview and How This Might Relate to Iceland and the Faroe Islands
Trond Kvamsdal, Norwegian University of Science and Technology: Floating Wind Turbines – State of the Art
Terji Nielsen, SEV: The Potential for Ocean Wind Energy in Faroes and Iceland
Marte Rusten, DNV: Accommodating Biodiversity in Nordic Offshore Wind Projects
How can the oceans provide us with greater prosperity, while at the same time helping us to achieve our green-growth goals? This was the question posed by NORA and Oslo-based Nordic Innovation during the 2022 Arctic Circle Assembly in Reykjavík.
The oceans and seas have always played a significant role — economically, culturally, and socially — in the development of the Nordic countries. But the rapid expansion of the global ocean economy has placed increased importance on ocean ecosystems and led to renewed attention on the sustainable use of the oceans.
The Nordic countries have set a goal of becoming the most sustainable and integrated region in the world by 2030, and NORA is contributing to this effort, in part through its focus on the ocean economy. One notable investment was crucial funding for a project that led to the establishment of Ocean Rainforest, a Faroe Islands-based firm that cultivates and harvests seaweed for terrestrial use. Ocean Rainforest, which also received funding from Nordic Innovation, has already expanded its operations to California and further growth is on the horizon.
“We think seaweed is a good solution because it grows faster than any other plant we know of, it only uses the natural nutrients in the ocean, and, as it grows, it takes up CO2 as well, and we can see that there is an increased market interest for these products in Europe and in the US,” said Ólavur Gregersen, the Ocean Rainforest managing director.
Mr Gregersen was speaking during a panel that also featured the participation of Þórður Reynisson, the head of Nordic Innovation’s Ocean Economy programme, Paul Dobbins, of World Wildlife Fund USA, and Catherine Barth, of Nordic Circular Hotspot.
Among Nordic Innovation’s contributions to increased and more sustainable use of ocean resources is a study written in support of a planned Nordic Sustainable Ocean Economy initiative that aims to strengthen the maritime industries in the region by promoting cross-border collaboration, and by creating new opportunities for growth and innovation in the region.
The Nordic region, Mr Reynisson argued, has a track record as a pioneer in creating innovative ocean-economy solutions that will serve it well as it seeks to come up with new initiatives.
“Oceans are oceans of possibilities,” he said, “but we need to unite and be smarter to utilise those possibilities and come up with innovations that can simultaneously protect the oceans and increase ocean utilisation at the same time. We need new circular business models that are good for business and good for the environment.”
Remote work has become a widely discussed phenomenon in the wake of the pandemic. For many office workers, the flexibility that remote work offers has suddenly made relocation to attractive, yet distant locations a viable option.
Fenomen je na rurale, som. Some of the changes may be permanent, but, in the remote part of the NORA area, the shifts in population patterns experienced during the pandemic — and their benefits — are nothing new.
Doppressive story of outmigration is one that is common to almost every remote village and hamlet in the region: as local employment opportunities dried up, the institutions that supported them moved away, and with them, the people who once called these places home.
Pero, durante el sessión de Nora-sponsored Arctic Circle Assembly, Remote Areas: A Window of Opportunity, academics and representatives from these areas told stories of back-movers, in-movers and digital nomads — while also explaining the strategies communities are following as they seek to return themselves from the brink. All of them trace their roots to well before the pandemic.
“Rural areas,” said Theona Morrison, of CoDel, which supports rural Scottish communities, “actually have something to offer. And this is something potential residents have been aware of for a long time.”
Het en on, je.
“One important part of being a remote community is that you have to think creatively,” Dennis Holm, of the University of the Faroe Islands, as well as the former mayor of Vágur council, said. “How can we turn our weaknesses and threats into opportunities and possibilities? And it's really difficult to do that, because a lot of communities don't have the people to do that. So it's not easy, but you have to do it anyway.”
Het weldige naar nieuwe residenten -- in anderen woorden, maken de communiteit een plaats waar te voorbeeld - is a crucial part of that effort, according to Arnar Sigurðsson, of East of the Moon.
“You can't just expect people to come. There are many windows that we need to identify, and they are opening and closing all the time.”
One of NORA’s core activities is to make grants to cooperation projects that seek to further socio-economic development in the North Atlantic region. NORA supports organisations and firms that contribute to innovation, concept development and increased activity in the region.All of the projects that receive NORA funding make a contribution to addressing the issues facing the region and are relevant to NORA’s main objective: to create a strong and dynamic North Atlantic that is notable for its healthy and sustainable economies. As the North Atlantic connects NORA’s constituents, many of the projects receiving funding naturally deal with maritime resources. Other NORA-funded projects contribute to creating and developing new directions and opportunities. In 2022, NORA-funded projects dealt with maritime activities, sustainable tourism, IT, transport, youth and agriculture.NORA funded 14 projects in 2022.NORA’s project portfolio currently includes 36 projects. Some projects recently received funding; others are close to completion.
The project will establish a Nordic sustainable fishing network that will strengthen collaboration across national borders in order to identify, solve and communicate shared challenges. As part of the project, a joint strategy and an action plan will be developed. The aim is to become a consulting party to the MSC and become a mouthpiece for sustainable fishing in the North Atlantic, in the hopes that taking a collective position will allow the countries in the region to influence the organisation’s decision-making.
NORA funding in 2022 DKK 250.000
The goal of this pre-project is to bring together a group of partners that can ensure local involvement in a proposedNordic Islands Adventure Race. Should it move on to the project phase, one of the potential outcomes would be the establishment of the NORA area as a destination for adventure travellers.
NORA funding in 2022 DKK 60.000
The Nordic Council of Ministers is obliged to live up to the Nordic prime ministers’ vision for the Nordic region by 2030. Investments in three strategic areas will contribute to the Nordic region becoming the world’s most sustainable and integrated region by 2030.
To achieve the vision, the Nordic Council of Ministers is investing in:
As part of the efforts to achieve Vision 2030, NORA has been included in the regional policy initiatives and is focusing on five of the 12 objectives that the ministers for Nordic co-operation have identified.
NORA’s tasks primarily consist of the following:
In 2021, NORA made grants to 17 projects; 33% of project funding went to projects related to the green transition, 41% to projects related to competitiveness and the remaining 26% to social sustainability in the Nordic region. Five of the projects have partners from the Nordic region’s western neighbours (the US, Canada and Scotland).
No decisions may be made prior to reviews and negotiations. The principle of consensus should be applied in negotiations whenever possible. For decisions of principle to be approved, none of the delegations may oppose the decision.
Jesper Schrøder
Committee Leader 2022 and Member of the Working Group
Suusaat Mathiassen
Committee Member
Allan Chemnitz
Committee Member
Lena Merete Søderholm
Committee Member and Member of the Working Group
Stig Olsen
Committee Member
Lisbeth Nylund
Committee Member
Kristján Þ. Halldórsson
Committee Leader 2023 and Member of the Working Group
Ásborg Ósk Arnþórsdóttir
Committee Member
Frosti Gíslason
Committee Member
Jákup Mørkøre
Committee Member and Member of the Working Group
Alex N. Vilhelm
Committee Member
Súsanna E. Sørensen
Committee Member