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Norway Plans To Donate $73-B Aid To Ukraine

  • Writer: By The Financial District
    By The Financial District
  • Feb 8, 2023
  • 2 min read

Oil-rich Norway is looking to donate 75 billion kroner ($7.3 billion) to Kyiv as part of a five-year support package that would make the Scandinavian country one of the world’s biggest donors to war-torn Ukraine, the Norwegian government said, the Associated Press (AP) reported.


Photo Insert: Prime Minister Jonas Gahr Støre said the money would be split evenly between military and humanitarian assistance over five years, broken down to 15 billion kroner ($1.5 billion) annually.



Prime Minister Jonas Gahr Støre said the money would be split evenly between military and humanitarian assistance over five years, broken down to 15 billion kroner ($1.5 billion) annually.


The proposed aid package will be put to a vote in parliament. Last week, European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen said that overall, the European Union’s economic, humanitarian, and military support for Ukraine now amounts to almost 50 billion euros.



Earlier this month, the EU said it would unveil its 10th package of sanctions against Russia on the Feb. 24 anniversary of the war. It will target technology used by Russia’s war machine, among other things.


Norway, which isn’t an EU member, gave Ukraine more than 10 billion kroner ($1 billion) in civilian and military aid last year. “It will lead to an increased use of oil money,” Gahr Støre said, adding that he’s hoping “a large majority” in the Norwegian parliament would approve the aid package.


A parliamentary majority is expected to pass the proposal.


All the news: Business man in suit and tie smiling and reading a newspaper near the financial district.

“Supporting Ukraine is supporting a people experiencing war, but it is also support for our fundamental security,” Gahr Støre told a press conference.


“We are showing the Ukrainians that we will support them for a long time,” adding it would make “it possible to plan better so that the money is used where the needs are greatest.”


Government & politics: Politicians, government officials and delegates standing in front of their country flags in a political event in the financial district.

At a conference earlier Monday in Oslo, Gahr Støre spoke of a new Iron Curtain dividing east and west. “The implications for Europe are hard to overestimate. A Russia in self-imposed isolation is bad news for of us.” He also said that “Ukraine’s needs are immense.”


The government in Oslo also proposed to increase the aid to countries that are hit by the war in Ukraine by 5 billion kroner ($490 million) -– that money should be used on humanitarian aid and food. Last week, Norway said that oil profits should go toward funding more aid to Ukraine.


Banking & finance: Business man in suit and tie working on his laptop and holding his mobile phone in the office located in the financial district.

Norway is one of Europe’s largest fossil-fuel exporters, and the war in Ukraine has boosted its gas revenues. Norway has fended off accusations that it’s profiting from the war in Ukraine.





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