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Norway

No retaliatory measures

Norway occupies a unique position as a wealthy, non-EU European country whose trade with the United States is dominated by two products: petroleum and salmon. As a non-EU member (though part of the EEA), Norway negotiates its own trade terms, giving it both independence and vulnerability — it lacks the EU's collective bargaining power.

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The 15% tariff on Norway goods — up from 1.0% before 2025 — adds an estimated $1.2B in annual tariff taxes on $7.8B of imports. American consumers pay this cost through higher prices on Petroleum and Seafood.

Current Tariff

📊

15%

Was 1.0%

US Imports

📥

$7.8B

2024 total

US Exports

📤

$6.2B

2024 total

Trade Balance

⚖️

$-1.6B

US deficit

Trade Flow (2024)

Tariff Rate Change

📈 5-Year Import Trend

📋 Trade Relationship Analysis

Norway occupies a unique position as a wealthy, non-EU European country whose trade with the United States is dominated by two products: petroleum and salmon. As a non-EU member (though part of the EEA), Norway negotiates its own trade terms, giving it both independence and vulnerability — it lacks the EU's collective bargaining power.

Norwegian salmon is arguably the country's most culturally significant export. Norway pioneered commercial salmon farming in the 1970s and now supplies approximately 35% of all salmon consumed in the United States. The 15% tariff adds $1-3 per pound, directly impacting restaurant menus and grocery fish counters. The $1.2 billion salmon trade supports fishing communities along Norway's entire Atlantic coast.

Petroleum remains the largest trade category, though Norwegian oil exports to the US have declined as American shale production grew. Norway's Equinor (formerly Statoil) operates in the Gulf of Mexico, blurring the line between imports and domestic production.

Norway's aluminum exports (Norsk Hydro) and fertilizers (Yara International) serve American manufacturing and agriculture. The sovereign wealth fund — the world's largest at $1.7 trillion — gives Norway financial resilience that most countries lack. Norway has not retaliated, preferring quiet diplomacy aligned with its NATO membership and Arctic security cooperation with the United States.

Tariff Impact

Pre-2025

1.0%

Current

15%

Increase

+14.0%

🏷️ Top Imported Products

ProductTariff RateImport ValuePrice Impact
Petroleum & Natural Gas15%$2.4B+$3-5 per barrel
Atlantic Salmon15%$1.2B+$1-3 per pound
Aluminum (Norsk Hydro)15%$1.4B+8-12% per ton
Fertilizers (Yara)15%$860M+8-12% farming costs
Machinery & Ships15%$1.2B+10-15% equipment costs

📅 Tariff Timeline

1994Norway rejects EU membership but joins EEA for trade access1%
2018Section 232 aluminum tariffs affect Norwegian exports25%
2019Aluminum tariffs partially reduced via quota agreement1%
202515% reciprocal tariff imposed — negotiated independently from EU15%

🎯 Retaliation — US Products Targeted

✅ No Retaliation
US Product TargetedUS Exports at RiskEstimated Loss
No retaliation — NATO/Arctic security cooperation prioritizedN/AN/A

💡 Did You Know?

  • Norway pioneered salmon farming in the 1970s and now supplies 35% of US salmon consumption
  • Norway's $1.7 trillion sovereign wealth fund is the largest in the world — it owns 1.5% of all global stocks
  • Norway is not an EU member, so it must negotiate tariff terms independently — without Brussels' leverage
  • Norwegian petroleum exports to the US dropped 50% since 2015 as US shale production surged

Key Product Categories

PetroleumSeafoodAluminumMachineryFertilizers