Metropolitan regions of Norway
There are 16 statistical metropolitan areas in Norway, of which six count as "Greater City Regions" (Storbyregioner) and ten as "City Regions" (Byregioner). The classification comes from Storbymeldingen (The Greater City Report) from the Norwegian Ministry of Local Government and Regional Development. This report was composed in 2002–2003 to create a coherent policy for the development of metropolitan areas within Norwegian society.[1] It was presented by then Minister of Local Government and Regional Development Erna Solberg on 12 March 2003.[2] The Greater City Regions contain cities with numbers of inhabitants ranging from around 60,000 to 1.4 million, while the City Regions range from around 45 to 175 thousand. This is out of a national population of around 5.2 million citizens.[3]
The three most populous regions are the Greater Oslo Region, the Greater Bergen Region, and the Greater Stavanger Region.
Greater City Regions
Six Norwegian cities are considered Greater Cities (Storbyer). This classification is the result of an overall evaluation of these cities' population and their importance as regional centres.[4] The six cities are Oslo, Bergen, Trondheim, Stavanger, Kristiansand and Tromsø. According to Storbymeldingen, these regions contained the following number of municipalities and inhabitants as of 1 July 2009 (the right-hand column shows the number of inhabitants in the main city, within the boundaries of its municipality):[4]
Greater City Region | Municipalities | Inhabitants in region 2010 |
Inhabitants in region 2030[5] |
Inhabitants in municipality 2010 |
---|---|---|---|---|
Greater Oslo Region | 46 | 1,422,443 | 1,835,191 | 590 041 |
Greater Bergen Region | 14 | 412,156 | 478,926 | 275,112 |
Greater Stavanger Region | 13 | 321,412 | 403,907 | 122,602 |
Trondheim Region | 11 | 261,759 | 301,966 | 169,343 |
Kristiansand Region | 10 | 155,648 | 185,051 | 80,748 |
Tromsø Region | 2 | 75,570 | 83,869 | 70,818 |
City Regions
In addition to these six regions, there are ten lesser regions referred to as City Regions (Byregioner). The City Regions of Drammen and Moss are for many purposes considered part of the Greater Oslo Region, bringing the number down to eight.[6] The City Regions, according to the same report, are the following (these regions do not all contain one, main city, so here this category is not included):[6]
City Region | Municipalities | Inhabitants in 2009 | Inhabitants in 2030[5] |
---|---|---|---|
Mjøsa Cities | 10 | 180,161 | 201,829 |
Drammen Region | 8 | 151,769 | 190,055 |
Lower Glomma Region | 4 | 143,992 | 173,620 |
Haugesund/Stord Region | 10 | 128,797 | 156,830 |
Tønsberg Region | 7 | 114,868 | 140,742 |
Grenland | 5 | 123,075 | 159,312 |
Larvik/Sandefjord Region | 3 | 87,531 | 100,897 |
Ålesund Region | 9 | 82,165 | 97,604 |
Moss Region | 4 | 55,290 | 66,887 |
Bodø Region | 3 | 48,878 | 60,557 |
See also
- List of cities in Norway
- Regions of Norway
- Counties of Norway
References
- "Innledning: Storbymeldingens mål og perspektiver" (in Norwegian). Norwegian Ministry of Local Government and Regional Development. 09-05-2003. Retrieved 2008-10-16. Check date values in:
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(help) - "Storbymelding uten løfter om øremerkede millioner" (in Norwegian). Aftenposten. 2008-03-12. Retrieved 2008-10-16.
- "Befolkning" (in Norwegian). Statistisk Sentralbyrå. Retrieved 2008-10-16.
- "Norske storbyer" (in Norwegian). Norwegian Ministry of Local Government and Regional Development. 09-05-2003. Retrieved 2008-10-16. Check date values in:
|date=
(help) - "Population per 1 January, by county and municipality. Registered 2009. Projected 2010–2030, by variant MMMM". Ssb.no. Retrieved 2010-05-08.
- "Norske storby- og byregioner" (in Norwegian). Norwegian Ministry of Local Government and Regional Development. 09-05-2003. Retrieved 2008-10-16. Check date values in:
|date=
(help)