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TODAY IN DENMARK

Today in Denmark: A roundup of the news on Thursday

Danish EU candidates want regulation of toys from China, Malmö decides location of possible Copenhagen Metro stations, Danish health agency recommends plenty of sleep and more news from Denmark this Thursday.

Today in Denmark: A roundup of the news on Thursday
Illustration photo. Danish health authorities say you should sleep at least seven hours per night. Photo: Ida Marie Odgaard/Ritzau Scanpix

Politicians want clampdown on toys bought from China 

Toys in Danish stores must meet EU safety standards, but this is niot the case for products purchased from Chinese webshops, which Danish politicians have called out as a potential safety risk.

Temu, Wish and Amazon are among popular online shopping platforms which don’t always have to comply with safety standards, broadcaster DR writes.

A survey conducted by DR found that several Danish candidates for the upcoming EU elections want a clampdown on such goods, which they say pose various kinds of safety hazard including chemicals and small components that small children can choke on.

“We must make platforms outside of the EU responsible for the products they sell just as we demand this of physical stores within the EU,” Social Democrat Christel Schaldemose said.

Vocabulary: vare – product

Hail is source of hazardous motorway conditions on Funen 

Hailstones peppered the E20 motorway between the Langeskov and Nyborg junctions on Funen early this morning, with several accidents reported as a result of the subsequent icy roads.

“Everyone has pulled over to the emergency lane but the section is slippery because of hail,” the P4 Trafik service for South Denmark posted in social media X, formerly Twitter.

Funen police confirmed “minor accidents” on the stretch.

“Winter is briefly visiting us again and the motorway is being extraordinarily salted between Odense and Nyborg because of the road temperature,” they said via X.

Motorists were urged to drive cautiously across Funen. The temperature is forecast to reach 8 degrees Celsius later today.

Vocabulary: hagl – hail (weather)

Agency issues recommendations for how much you should sleep

The Danish Health Authority has issued its first ever recommendations for the amount of time adults should sleep.

The agency recommends adults aged 18-25 sleep between 7-9 hours per 24-hour period, with the sleep at regular intervals. The exact same recommendation applies to 26-64 year-olds, while for people 65 years and over the amount drops slightly to 7-8 hours.

Those amounts probably sound wildly unrealistic to anyone with small children, though this is also recognised by the Health Authority. Section leader Maja Bækgaard Jørgensen said societal structure can work against healthy sleep.

“That’s why we want to strike a blow for how important it is that we prioritise our sleep because sleep is very important for our health and wellbeing,” she said in a press statement.

Vocabulary – søvnunderskud – sleep deprivation

Malmö plans location of its first three Copenhagen Metro stops

Politicians in Swedish city Malmö have decided where the first three stops will be if a new Øresund Metro is built, linking the city to Copenhagen – and they are planning on using the earth excavated to build a whole new city district.

Malmö and Copenhagen have been pushing for an Øresund Metro linking the two cities since at least 2011, but so far neither the Swedish government nor the Danish one have committed to stumping up their share of the roughly 30 billion Danish kroner (47 billion Swedish kronor, €4 billion) required.

Malmö hopes the Swedish government will take a decision on the project this autumn, and in preparation, the city’s planning board last Thursday took a decision on where the first three stops of the Öresund Metro should be placed.

They have selected Fullriggaren (currently a bus stop at the outermost tip of the city’s Västra Hamnen district), Stora Varvsgatan, in the centre of Västra Hamnen, and Malmö’s Central Station, as the first three stops, after which the idea is to extend the metro into the city. 

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TODAY IN DENMARK

Today in Denmark: A roundup of the latest news on Monday

Train delays in Zealand, Novo Nordisk Foundation teams up with Bill Gates on global health, trawling ban on five reefs, and more news from Denmark on Monday.

Today in Denmark: A roundup of the latest news on Monday

DSB warns of delays and canceled trains on Monday morning

Danish train company DSB has warned on its website of serious delays to traffic on Monday morning, and some cancellations, after a fault on an overhead line at Sorø affected traffic between Ringsted and Slagelse.  

The company said that fault meant trains could only use one track between Ringsted and Slagelse, increasing journey times. DSB expects track operator Banedanmark to fix the fault between 7am and 8am, after which both tracks available later on Monday morning.  

Danish vocabulary: køreledning – overhead line 

Novo Nordisk Foundation, Bill Gates and Wellcome, to spend $300m on global health 

The foundation which owns more than 28 percent of the Danish pharmaceutical giant Novo Nordisk has teamed up with the Wellcome Foundation and the Bill Gates Foundation to plough $300m into scientific research and development to promote global health, focusing on “solutions that are accessible and affordable to people in low- and middle-income countries”. 

Over three years, the three foundations will each invest $100m (700m Danish kroner) into combatting the health impacts of climate change, infectious disease, and antimicrobial resistance (AMR). 

“By pooling the vast experience and unique expertise of each organization—across research, technology, innovation, and enterprise—we can make advances that wouldn’t otherwise be possible,” Mads Krogsgaard Thomsen, CEO, Novo Nordisk Foundation, said in a press release.

The project was announced at the Novo Nordisk Foundation’s Global Science Summit in Denmark on Sunday. 

Danish vocabulary: infektionssygdomme – infectious diseases

Denmark to ban trawling on five ecologically significant Danish reefs

Denmark has announced plans to ban trawling on five Natura 2000 areas in the North Sea and Skagerrak in a move the country’s fisheries minister, Jacob Jensen, said was the first step towards a total ban on beam trawlers from The Netherlands. 

“Unfortunately, we have several times seen examples of foreign beam trawlers who have been caught violating the fishing regulations, Jensen said in a press release announcing the decision. “They are simply destroying too much of our seabed, and we cannot live with that.”

As well as beam trawlers, the ban will also apply to bottom trawls, and seine nets and will apply at Lønstrup Rødgrund, Thyborøn Stenvolde, Jyske Reef, Store Reef and Gule Reef. 

Danish vocabulary: havbunden – the seabed 

EES border checks could undergo ‘soft launch’, UK says as app concerns mount

The UK government is preparing for a “soft launch” of the new EU border system – the Entry/Exit (EES) system – in October but authorities are still waiting for the European Commission to confirm the start date, amid concerns over the delay of a new app.

The government is assuming that the system will go live on October 6th, ministers told a hearing at the House of Commons European scrutiny committee this week.

But the European Commission is expected to confirm the exact launch date of the new biometric checks for non-EU travellers entering the Schengen area at some point this summer, they added.

“We are very much working on a basis whereby this policy will go live on the 6th of October. It is important that we plan for that eventuality. We are expecting to hear definitively from the European Union that ‘go live’ arrangement in the summer,” Tom Pursglove, UK Minister for Legal Migration and the Border told the committee.

The parliamentary committee is conducting an inquiry on the disruptions the system will cause in the UK.

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