Norwegian Directorate of Fisheries explained

Agency Name:Norwegian Directorate of Fisheries
Nativename:Fiskeridirektoratet
Type:Government agency
Formed:1900
Headquarters:Bergen, Norway
Chief1 Name:Frank Bakke-Jensen
Chief1 Position:Director
Parent Agency:Ministry of Trade, Industry and Fisheries
Website:www.fiskeridir.no

The Norwegian Directorate of Fisheries (Norwegian: Fiskeridirektoratet) is a Norwegian government agency. On 1 January 2014 it was incorporated into the new Ministry of Trade, Industry and Fisheries formerly under the Ministry of Fisheries and Coastal Affairs.[1]

Established in 1900, it is responsible for advising and executing the ministry's policy. It formerly conducted research, but the Institute of Marine Research was split out in 1989.[2] The organization consists of a headquarters in Bergen, seven regional offices and more than twenty local offices spread around the country.[3]

Heads of the Directorate have been Gabriel Westergaard and Jens O. Dahl (1900–1906), Johan Hjort (1906–1918), Sigurd Asserson (1918–1937), H.J. Salvesen (1938–1945), Ola Brynjelsen (1945–1948), Klaus Sunnanå (1948–1973), Knut Vartdal (1973–1978), Hallstein Rasmussen (1978–1988), Viggo Jan Olsen (1988–1996) andPeter Gullestad (1996–2008),[2] Liv Holmefjord (2008–2020) and Frank Bakke-Jensen (2021–present).

Notes and References

  1. News: Slutt på Fiskeridepartementet. Klassekampen. 3 January 2014. 9. Norwegian.
  2. Encyclopedia: 2007. Fiskeridirektoratet. Abraham. Hallenstvedt. Store norske leksikon. Henriksen, Petter. Kunnskapsforlaget. Oslo. Norwegian. 16 April 2009.
  3. Web site: About the Regions. 12 July 2006. Norwegian Directorate of Fisheries. 16 April 2009.