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TODAY IN DENMARK

Today in Denmark: A roundup of the news on Thursday

Aarhus bans public sector staff from snus, Danish chefs win prestigious championships, government to pursue Nordic Waste sister company for landslide costs and more news from Denmark on Thursday.

Today in Denmark: A roundup of the news on Thursday
Denmark's team came first in the Bocuse d'Or Europe in Trondheim. Photo: Gorm Kallestad/NTB/Ritzau Scanpix

Aarhus Municipality bans staff from using tobacco during work hours 

Employees of Aarhus municipality will no longer be able to place snus, the little nicotine bag, under their gums during work time.

A decision to ban snus was made by a majority in the city council, and means that the Aarhus Municipality policy on smoking has now been broadened to include all nicotine products including the little snus pouches.

Some 28,000 municipal staff including social care sector, childcare and school employees will be affected by the rule, which takes effect on May 1st.

“Aarhus Municipality has a big responsibility to lead the way and signal that nicotine products, just like cigarettes, are not part of the culture as an employee of Aarhus Municipality,” health councillor Christian Budde told newswire Ritzau in a written comment.

Vocabulary: rygepolitik – smoking policy

Denmark wins prestigious chef championship

A Danish team led by Sebastian Holberg Svendsgaard, a former chef at three-star Michelin restaurant Geranium, yesterday won first prize in the prestigious European Bocuse d’Or gastronomic competition.

The Danish team presented their dishes after five and a half hours in the kitchen, newswire Ritzau writes.

This included a “Nordic mythology-inspired” dish of fish with a black wavy edge on top that had been roasted and fried. Inside the fish was the Danish Vesterhavsost cheese with herbs.

The Danish win means the duo get to compete in the world championship version of the event next year.

Vocabulary: kokkehold – team of chefs

Nordic Waste sister company can be held liable over landslide

DSH Recycling, a company with the same owners as Nordic Waste, can be held liable for costs resulting from the landslide at Nordic Waste’s soil treatment plant in December last year, the government’s legal advisor Kammeradvokaten has concluded.

The local authority, Randers Municipality, is currently bearing the financial weight of operations to prevent environmental damage after Nordic Waste declared itself bankrupt in the aftermath of the landslip.

READ ALSO: Danish village no longer under threat from Nordic Waste landslide

The government will now pursue DSH Recycling for costs.

“The legal investigation showed that responsibility for the landslide is not limited to Nordic Waste A/S, which ran the operation, but also includes DSH Recycling A/S, a part of the same corporation,” Environment Minister Magnus Heunicke said in a statement.

Vocabulary: koncern – corporation

Denmark ‘closer’ to Finland but still second in 2024 World Happiness Report

Denmark’s reputation as the ‘world’s second-happiest country’ has been bolstered by the latest edition of the UN’s World Happiness Report, which again ranks the Scandinavian nation second behind Finland.

The UN’s World Happiness Report, published on Wednesday, puts Denmark second on its national happiness ranking.

Finland takes the title of world’s happiest nation, once closely associated with Denmark, for the seventh year in a row.

The Danish second place is the same as its 2022 and 2023 rankings and one spot better than in 2021.

The United States fell out of the top 20 for the first time since the report began in 2012, getting a ranking of 23. The United Kingdom was 20th, Australia 10th and Ireland 17th.

Nordic neighbours Sweden and Norway were 4th and 7th respectively.

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TODAY IN DENMARK

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

King Frederik X praises Norwegian TV series, Bornholm trialing lampposts as car chargers, today could be the first official day of summer, and other news from Denmark on Wednesday.

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

King Frederik X praises Norwegian TV series Skam on state visit 

Denmark’s King Frederik X has credited the Norwegian TV series Skam, meaning “Shame”, for bringing young peole from Denmark and Norway together, at a speech at the Norwegian Royal Palace in Oslo. 

“Norway is almost the Nordic champion in youth series, and today the majority of Danish youngsters know the meaning of tuller du? [“Are you kidding?”] and serr [“Seriously?”],” he said in the speech.

In Denmark, he continued, the series was so popular that it led to several Norwegian words and expressions working their way into the Danish language.

King Frederik and Queen Mary are on a state tour of Sweden and Norway.  

Danish vocabulary: betydningen – the meaning

Denmark trials using lampposts as car chargers 

The Danish Technical University is working with the municipality and muncipal power company on the island of Bornholm to trial using lampposts in the capital, Rønne, as chargers for electric vehicles. 

The lampposts have been shifted to LED bulbs, so use only a franction of the electrical capacity they were built with, freeing up capacity for the charger.

“We have set up a traditional charging stand in a lamppost, where electricity has already been connected. Because we now have LED fixtures, there is plenty of spare capacity. So you can easily charge an electric car overnight with the charging stand installed here,” said Claus Andersen, from the power company. 

The project has intalled chargers from the Spirii brand, which can charge up at up to 22 kwh.

“It’s a great idea to take a metal stand at the edge of the road which still has electricity in it and put a charger in it,” said Mads Aarup, at the Danish Society of Engineers. “It’s super good. It’s brilliant because it has dual use.” 

Danish vocabulary: genial – brilliant 

New Danish train signalling delayed by three years  

A new signalling system being rolled out across Denmark will not be completed until 2033, three years later than the 2030 target, with the rollout on the tracks between Copenhagen and Helsingör, and between Roskilde and Copenhagen particularly badly delayed, Denmark’s rail operator, Banedanmark, has said. 

This means rail travellers will have to wait even longer to have their routes “future-proofed”. 

The problems are connected to Alstom, which is responsible for the new signalling system, and which had wanted to delay project completion until 2031. 

“Alstom has taken good measures to reassure us, but we have not yet seen it implemented,” Peter Jonasson, from Banedanmark told the Ritzau newswire. “Therefore, we have become sceptical about the timetable and assessed that a buffer of another two years is needed.” 

He acknowledges that during the process there has been an opportunity to change supplier, but it is more complicated than that, it says.

Danish vocabulary: fremtidssikret – future-proofed

Denmark may get first summer day of the year

Today could mark the first day of summer, with the temperature passing 25C at at least one of the official measuring stations run by the Danish Meteorological Institute. 

On Tuesday, Denmark came within a tenth of a degree of meteorological summer when the measuring station in Stauning near Skjern reached 24.9C. 

DMI is predicting 20C by lunchtime in the western parts of Jutland, as well as on Funen, Zealand and the surrounding islands, with the temperatures then creeping up to between 21C and 23C across the West Coast, with temperatures of 24C to 25C close to the German border.

Danish vocabulary: en målestation – a measuring station 

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