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Norway sovereign fund drops investments in 11 Israeli companies

Fuelled by revenues from Norway's state-owned oil and gas companies, the fund is aimed at financing future spending in the generous welfare state. (AFP)
  • Nicolai Tangen, chief of Norges Bank Investment Management (NBIM), which manages the fund, said the decision was taken "in response to extraordinary circumstances".
  • Norway's wealth fund is the biggest in the world with a value of around $1.9 trillion, with investments spanning the globe.

Oslo, Norway — Norway’s sovereign wealth fund, the world’s largest, said Monday that it was selling its investments in 11 Israeli companies, following reports it had invested in an Israeli jet engine maker even as the war in Gaza raged.

Nicolai Tangen, chief of Norges Bank Investment Management (NBIM), which manages the fund, said the decision was taken “in response to extraordinary circumstances”.

“The situation in Gaza is a serious humanitarian crisis. We are invested in companies that operate in a country at war, and conditions in the West Bank and Gaza have recently worsened,” Tangen said in a statement.

Norway’s wealth fund, also known as the oil fund as it is fueled by vast revenue from the country’s energy exports, is the biggest in the world with a value of around $1.9 trillion, with investments spanning the globe.

Last week, Norwegian newspaper Aftenposten reported that the fund had invested in Israeli Bet Shemesh Engines Holdings, which makes parts for engines used in Israeli fighter jets.

Tangen later confirmed the reports, and said the fund had increased its stake after the Israeli offensive in Gaza began.

The revelations led Prime Minister Jonas Gahr Store to ask Finance Minister and former NATO secretary general Jens Stoltenberg for a review.

NBIM said it had investments in 61 Israeli companies at the end of the first six months of this year, 11 of which were not in its “equity benchmark index” — which is set by the finance ministry and used to gauge the wealth fund’s performance.

In a statement, it added that it had decided last week that “all investments in Israeli companies that are not in the equity benchmark index will be sold as soon as possible”.

The fund also said that it had “long paid particular attention to companies associated with war and conflict”.

“Since 2020, we have been in contact with more than 60 companies to raise this issue. Of these, 39 dialogues were related to the West Bank and Gaza,” NBIM said.

It said that monitoring of Israeli companies had been intensified in the autumn of 2024, and that “as a result, we have sold our investments in several Israeli companies”.