Norway parliament approves $2 billion artillery plan

ReutersReuters

Norway parliament approves $2 billion artillery plan

Reuters

Tue, January 27, 2026 at 2:14 PM UTC

2 min read

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OSLO, Jan 27 (Reuters) - Norway's parliament on Tuesday approved a $2 billion procurement plan for long-range artillery to boost the NATO country's ​deterrence against Russia in the Arctic, where the two nations ‌share a border.

European countries are in the midst of hiking defence spending, under pressure to ‌do so by the administration of U.S. President Donald Trump and unnerved by Russia's invasion of Ukraine.

"These are weapons that can reach far behind enemy lines... this is decisive in modern warfare," Peter Froelich, the defence policy spokesperson ⁠for the opposition Conservatives, ‌told parliament on Tuesday.

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SOUTH KOREAN VS U.S. SUPPLIER

Norwegian daily Aftenposten, citing anonymous sources, on January 24 reported that the ‍government has selected South Korean defence contractor Hanwha Aerospace's Chunmoo artillery system, beating U.S. Lockheed Martin's HIMARS.

Some members of Norway's parliament have said the Nordic country should ​help develop a European missile alternative, but this has been dismissed ‌as too time-consuming and costly by government officials charged with making the selection.

The South Korean system met all requirements set by Norway for the ground-based artillery, including the ability to fire at a range of up to 500 km (310 miles), and had the quickest delivery time, according to the ⁠Aftenposten report.

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Norway's defence ministry, which is expected ​to soon announce the contract winner, did ​not immediately respond to a request for comment.

The ministry has said it plans to acquire 16 launch systems along with ‍an undisclosed number ⁠of rockets for a total cost of 19.5 billion crowns ($2.0 billion).

Hanwha Aerospace last year signed an agreement with Polish defence company WB ⁠Electronics to form a joint venture producing missiles in Poland, including for the Chunmoo rocket ‌artillery, ensuring manufacturing on European soil.

($1 = 9.7484 Norwegian crowns)

(Reporting by ‌Terje Solsvik, editing by Gwladys Fouche)

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