Government agrees to phase out industry that produces about one million pelts a year as it seeks coalition deal

Fur flies in Norway over ban on mink and fox farms

A plan by Norway’s government to phase out fur farms by 2025 dismayed producers and delighted animal rights activists as a sign that fur is out of fashion even in a nation that was once the world’s top producer of fox pelts.



The Conservative government of prime minister Erna Solberg has agreed to shut fox and mink farms that produce about one million pelts a year as part of a deal to broaden her two two-party minority government by adding the anti-fur Liberal party.

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“We’re shocked, shaken to the core,” said Guri Wormdahl of the Norwegian Fur Breeders Association.

She said there are about 200 fur farms in Norway employing about 400 people under strict rules for animal welfare with annual turnover of up to 500m Norwegian crowns ($46m/US$63m).

Animal rights group Noah hailed the decision as part of a shift against what it views as an outdated and cruel business with dwindling appeal to fashion-conscious consumers.

“We’re very pleased,” Noah leader Siri Martinsen said, adding the plan seemed sure of majority support in Norway’s parliament.

Fox farming peaked in Norway in 1939, just before the second world war, when the nation was the biggest world producer with almost 20,000 farms, according to a government report.

In 2013, by contrast, Norway produced only about 3% of 7.3m fox furs worldwide in a market dominated by China, with 69%, and Finland, it said.

That same year, Norway produced 1% of world mink output of 72.6m, a market also dominated by China.

“It’s not a very lucrative business in Norway,” said Sveinung Fjose, of Menon Business Economics and an expert on fur farms. “It wouldn’t harm the Norwegian economy severely [to close it down].”

Humane Society International, which campaigns against the fur trade, said in a statement that Norway was the 14th European nation to phase out fur farming, “sparing animals who would otherwise spend their entire lives in cramped, barren cages.

In 2017 Italy’s Gucci said it would stop using fur in its designs, joining a growing number of fashion houses looking at alternatives after coming under pressure from animal rights activists and changing consumer tastes.