Of all the Scandinavian countries, only Norway shares a land border with New Zealand - at the South Pole in Antarctica where Norway's claim to Queen Maud Land and New Zealand's claim to the Ross Dependency meet.
International issues
New Zealand joined 11 other countries in 2006 in delivering a formal diplomatic protest to the Norwegian Foreign Ministry in Oslo over Norway's plans to increase its whaling activities.[2]
Reidar Sveaas, director of P&O Maritime Ltd. and honorary consul to Auckland said in 2000 that excellent opportunities existed for New Zealand to trade with the world's second largest oil-producing country, Norway.[4]
Investment
Norske Skog of Norway operates the Tasman Mill in New Zealand. It represents one of the most prominent Nordic investments in New Zealand industry.[5][6]
Norsewood in New Zealand's Seventy Mile Bush started as a Norwegian settlement in 1872.[7][8][9] In 1881 New Zealand had 1,271 Norway-born residents, in 1901 there were 1,278.[10]
Official visits
In over 100 years of relations, there have only been two state visits between these countries. In 2004, Helen Clark, became the first New Zealand Prime Minister to ever visit Norway. She said that both countries see eye-to-eye on almost everything, except the commercial harvesting of whales.[11][12]
Other official visits have included:
^The Norway year book. Vol. 2. Oslo: Sverre Mortensen Forlag. 1938. p. 364. Retrieved 2009-12-10. [...] Norsewood in New Zealand is a Norwegian settlement that celebrated its 50th anniversary in 1922.