Norway Raises Spending from Oil Fund to $44B in 2020

Terje Solsvik
Friday, May 29, 2020
Image by sezerozger/AdobeStock

Norway's government has further raised its projected 2020 spending from the country's sovereign wealth fund to 424.6 billion Norwegian crowns ($43.67 billion) from 419.6 billion seen on May 12, it said on Friday.

The so-called structural non-oil deficit corresponds to 4.2% of the fund's Jan. 1 value, making use of a provision in Norway's fiscal framework that allows withdrawals to exceed a 3% cap to counteract economic setbacks.

Before the coronavirus outbreak the government had planned to spend 243.6 billion crowns from the fund.

 ($1 = 9.7240 Norwegian crowns) (Reporting by Terje Solsvik, editing by Gwladys Fouche)

Categories: Finance Energy Industry News Activity Europe Oil

Related Stories

Eni Starts Drilling Activities off Ghana with Seventh-Gen Drillship

Eni Starts Drilling Activities off Ghana with Seventh-Gen Drillship

Kuwait, Saudi Arabia Make Oil Discovery in Neutral Zone

Kuwait, Saudi Arabia Make Oil Discovery in Neutral Zone

Equinor's Troll Gas Field Outage Extends to end of May

Equinor's Troll Gas Field Outage Extends to end of May

Current News

Aker Solutions Awarded Contract for BalWin2 Offshore Wind Project

Nigeria Introduces Oil Tax Relief for Cost-Cutting Measures Implementation

Gazelle Secures Multi-Million Funding for Floating Wind Demo

OMV Exits Ghasha Gas Project off UAE with Lukoil Stake Sale

Subscribe for OE Digital E‑News

Offshore Engineer Magazine