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STUDYING IN NORWAY

Norwegian government appoints new universities and research minister

Sandra Borch will leave her current post as Minister of Agriculture and Food to take over as the new Minister of Research and Higher Education.

Pictured is university lecture hall.
Norway has appointed a new university minister. Pictured is university lecture hall. Photo by Changbok Ko on Unsplash

Sandra Borch will take over the Minister of Education and Research role, replacing Ola Borten Moe, who resigned in July over a conflict-of-interest case.

Borch, a Centre Party MP for Troms in northern Norway, will leave her post as agriculture minister with Geir Pollestadt taking over. Oddmund Løkensgard Hoel will leave his role as the State Secretary for Research and Higher Education Minister.

Before the announcement, higher education news publication Khrono reported that Marit Arnstad, Marit Knutsdatter Strand, and Oddmund Løkensgard Hoel could have been considered contenders.

Borch currently hasn’t held any roles relevant to the higher education post. But has previously obtained a master’s degree in law from The Arctic University of Tromsø.

The appointment has been met with some criticism. Safina de Klerk, manager of the Oslo Science Centre, told the Norwegian newspaper VG that Borch had a history of contradicting the research community and surrounding herself with advisors whose views align with hers.

“We are electing a minister who, throughout her term as agriculture minister, has contradicted the research community and experts. She has done so in the kind of wording that shows that every time research contradicts her political convictions, she thinks the researchers are wrong. What she does is so-called cherry-picking,” she told VG.

The new research and higher education minister has previously said she was sceptical of new dietary advice drawn up by food experts in the Nordics, which recommended Norwegians eat less red meat.

However, student groups have reacted more positively to the appointment.

“We are positive about the new research and higher education minister who is both relatively well acquainted with the education sector – and has actually had a student life and has a master’s in law,” Kaja Ingdal Hovdenak, leader of the student parliament at the University of Bergen said.

The University of Oslo’s student parliament has said that Borch is expected to be more receptive to students than her predecessor, Ola Borten Moe, had been.

“We expect her to listen to what the students have to say. We sent a clear signal to Ola Borten Moe by declaring him persona non grata,” Elisabeth Hoksmo Olsen, leader of the student parliament at the University of Oslo, said.

“She has to deliver on student housing and mental health among students, and something that solves an incredible amount in the long term is that we get increased student support,” Olsen said.

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STUDYING IN NORWAY

‘We work 12 hours a week just to pay rent’: Norway’s students face housing crisis

Long housing queues are forcing more of Norway's students onto the private rental market. However, rising rents means students are now focusing more on work to pay bills than they are their studies.

'We work 12 hours a week just to pay rent': Norway's students face housing crisis

Finding accommodation in Norway’s major cities has become increasingly challenging for students as the rise in short-term rentals to tourists further limits housing availability.

READ MORE: ‘Deeply concerning’: Is Airbnb eating away Norway’s student housing supply?

With over 12,000 students still waiting for a place to live as of August 15th, the Norwegian Student Organisation (NSO) has declared the situation a full-blown housing crisis.

But just how severe is the problem, and what steps can be taken to address the challenges students in Norway are currently facing?

Long student housing queues across Norway

Many students across the country are currently facing significant uncertainty regarding their housing prospects, according to Sigve Næss Røtvold, the head of Welfare and Equality at the NSO.

“We know that Oslo and Bergen have the longest student accommodation queues, which puts these cities in the most critical situation,” Næss Røtvold told The Local.

“However, we see long queues all over the country, with students unsure if they will be accommodated by the local welfare organisations (Studentsamskipnad). This leaves them facing an uncertain future,” he said.

READ ALSO: The cities in Norway with the worst student housing queues

Shortage of student housing

The crux of the issue lies in the significant shortage of student housing, driven by insufficient construction efforts, the NSO believes.

“There is a large shortage of student housing in Norway because too few construction projects are being started,” Næss Røtvold said.

“According to our student housing report, we are missing nearly 14,000 housing units to meet our goal of accommodating one in five students…

“Achieving this requires seamless cooperation between the government, municipalities, and welfare organisations, with the government providing funds, municipalities offering plots, and welfare organisations building the accommodations,” he said.

A tougher rental market for students

The rental market has become increasingly challenging for students, with rents climbing steadily.

Næss Røtvold pointed to rental prices for a one-bedroom apartment rising by ten percent nationally and 15 percent in Oslo as an example of how renting had become more expensive for students. 

“We’ve seen in the recent student index that students have to work more than 12 hours a week to afford rent in 50 percent of the rooms in apartments or co-living spaces in the biggest student cities.” Næss Røtvold

READ MORE: Everything you need to know if you want to study in Norway in 2024

Students in Norway are limited to how much they can work in order to receive student loans. Foreign students in Norway are also restricted to how much they can work during term time. If they work more than permitted, they risk losing their student visas

The way forward

To address the crisis, Næss Røtvold emphasised the need for a coordinated effort to increase student housing.

“The government, together with municipalities and welfare organisations, must build more student accommodations and ensure the construction of student housing for the future,” he urged, highlighting the pressing need for a long-term solution to secure affordable housing for students across Norway.

Talking to The Local last week, Morten Andreas Meyer, the general secretary of the nationwide homeowner interest organisation Huseierne, echoed NSO’s concerns.

“We have seen this coming and are worried about this trend (of increasing short-term rentals to tourists, reducing the availability of homes that traditionally served students).

“Livable cities and communities need a sustainable private rental market where long-term rentals are prioritised,” Meyer said.

“It’s problematic when rental properties for students are effectively turned into hotel rooms,” he further pointed out, advocating for a straightforward solution: “In short, the most important solution is to build more homes.”

Can you cover your expenses without working while studying in the country? You can find the answer in The Local’s deep-dive article on the issue, here.

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