News round up

  • Who gets an interview, Sara or Zainab? Racism documentary tests Danish labour market

    Is Sara or Zainab more likely to be called for a job interview, if their application and qualifications are identical? Here’s what TV2’s new documentary found out. Plus, a study finds migrant construction workers’ accidents are systematically underreported, and the Danish foreign minister joins Arab and Muslim counterparts to discuss peace options in Israel and Palestine


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  • From Thailand to Georgia: these are the 13 new winter routes at CPH Airport

    SAS has reopened its route to Bangkok after ten years, as well as services to Miami and Agadir in Morocco for winter 2023. Plus, Denmark gets a new economy minister and CNN lists Tivoli’s Christmas Market as one of the world’s best.


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  • New law in 2024: you must clock in and out of work

    Employers and trade unions are divided over the EU requirement, variously calling it annoying, patronizing, positive and necessary. Plus, Danes are swapping sleep for screentime, according to a new digital trends report, and three contested Greek marble heads will stay in Denmark, against the Athens Acropolis Museum’s wishes.


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  • Pusher Street is being cleared

    “You wouldn’t have been able to do this at all 10 years ago,” said a deputy inspector at the scene. Plus, a new survey finds Danes expect welfare to decline and would pay more tax to save it, air pollution in the capital is worse than we think, and a high-speed car chase in Nørrebro puts four police officers in hospital.


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  • Transport Agency cautions drone-buyers ahead of Black Friday

    Eyeing a discount drone? New EU regulations will affect where you can fly after 1 January. Plus, a historic interest hike on F1 loans hits today, Denmark opens strategic new embassies in Balkan ‘frontline states’, and P!NK is coming to Copenhagen.


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  • Danish university named Europe’s best in new ranking

    DTU has beaten 225 institutions in 27 countries to the top spot. Plus, a record number of people have applied for Christmas financial aid, and two landmark cases brought by the Climate Movement – accusing Lynnetteholmen of environmental neglect, and the pork company Danish Crown of greenwashing – go to court.


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  • Lord Mayor of Copenhagen joins Bill Gates, Coldplay and Sophie on TIME most influential list

    She is the only Dane on the list and says “my mother will be proud of that.” Elsewhere, Danes are using three times more cocaine than a decade ago, SSI warns of five respiratory viruses and bacteria rampant in Denmark, and a new study finds that state museums favour art by men over art by women.


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  • Overburdened General Practitioners warn of waiting times into the new year

    GPs have been warning of overwork and underfunding all year. Now, the consequences are here. Elsewhere, snow is falling in Hillerød, Christmas train disruptions are announced, and Denmark racks up another quantum tech achievement.


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  • Financial markets light up – Danish PM hosts mini EU summit

    Inflation is down, which is good news to the financial markets. Nordic researchers are calling for a boycott of Israeli research and a large company has got its very own bus route


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  • Study: Almost half of Danes want to work less and earn less

    Economic professors muse that Denmark’s national prosperity means people feel safe sacrificing salary for more time off. Plus, activists blockade a Danish weapons company, and Coop’s unpopular new milk lids are scrapped.


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  • Wegovy startles in cardiovascular study, climate activists promise events in capital

    Top stories in Denmark today

    • Wegovy shows promising pace for Novo
    • Green ferry power can charge an hour in 20 minutes
    • Climate activists block packed highway
    • Danish youth break their own chlamydia record
    • Rescue divers rescue man from Nyhavn

    Wegovy shows promising pace for Novo

    At the weekend, Novo Nordisk presented data showing that the drug Wegovy reduces the risk of cardiovascular events by 20 per cent. compared to placebo.

    “I’ve been working on this for 22 years, and I’ve never seen such consistency across everything we’ve looked at,” said Martin Holst Lange, Group CEO of Novo Nordisk responsible for the development of new medicines, at an analyst meeting, according to Euroinvestor.

    Novo’s cardiovascular study, called Select, was conducted in 17,604 obese adults over the age of 45 with established cardiovascular disease, but without diabetes.

    The results generally show that Wegovy reduces the risk of serious cardiovascular events, i.e., blood clots, strokes and cardiovascular death by 20 per cent.

    Furthermore, Wegovy influences all parameters that Novo has looked at. This applies, among other things, to blood clots, strokes, cardiovascular death, death from any cause, hospitalization, chronic kidney disease and the risk of developing diabetes.

    The Novo Nordisk share rose 3 percent on Monday morning.

    Green ferry power can charge an hour in 20 minutes

    On the Øresund line between Helsingør and Helsingborg, electric car owners can now park their electric car on the ferry and let the car be charged.

    The Øresund line’s ferries can now offer fast and powerful charging for a full 250 extra kilometers on the short trip across the Øresund.

    “The proportion of electric cars is increasing all the time, and the more cars that hit the roads, the greater the need for fast and flexible charging. Here you can combine a break from the drive with fresh energy and an extra 250 kilometers in your electric car”, explains Molslinjen’s managing director, Kristian Durhuus in a press release.

    Four chargers with space for eight cars on each departure are installed on each of the electric ferries, Aurora and Tycho Brahe. This means that up to 260,000 electric cars can be charged annually on the frequent route across the Øresund.

    Climate activists block packed highway

    On Monday morning, climate activists blocked motorway exit 21 Avedøre on the E20 motorway protesting the expansion of the Danish highway network.

    Six people are with the demonstration. The participants carry orange banners with the text ‘Drop the new motorways’, informs Nødbremsen on its website.

    “We, as a climate campaign, are escalating our methods because the government is right now with open eyes escalating the climate collapse we are in, among other things by building these 15 new motorways, as part of the Agreement on Infrastructure Plan 2035,” said the participant in Nødbremsen, Laura Krarup Frandsen to TV 2.

    The blockade will not be an isolated incident. Nødbremsen is planning several similar actions in the next few weeks, says Laura Krarup Frandsen.

    In October, a man from Nødbremsen jumped onto the stage at Det Kongelige Teater during a performance. He carried a banner with the text ‘Climate Collapse – Pull the Emergency Brake. He managed to hold up the banner in front of the audience for half a minute before being escorted off the stage.

    The climate movement explains that it exercises “peaceful civil disobedience” to draw the attention of Danish politicians to the climate crisis.

    Danish youth break their own chlamydia record

    In 2022, young Danes beat their own record for the number of chlamydia cases for the second year in a row, DR reports.

    There were a total of 35,687 confirmed cases of chlamydia among the 15-29-year-olds last year, writes Sex & Society in a press release.

    According to Majbrit Berlau, secretary general of Sex & Society, far too few – especially young men – allow themselves to be tested. In all regions, the women’s test rate is well over twice as high as the men’s.

    Therefore, the dark figure is probably higher.

    “We have a shared responsibility to break the chlamydia curve. To break the curve, more people must protect themselves with condoms, get tested and treated,” says Majbrit Berlau.

    Chlamydia is an infection of the urethra, cervix or rectum and is the most common sexually transmitted disease. Most people experience no symptoms, but the infection can develop into inflammation in the abdomen and can cause chronic abdominal pain and female sterility.

    Rescue divers rescue man from Nyhavn

    On Sunday evening an elderly man was rescued from the water at Nyhavn by rescue divers from Hovedstadens Beredskab, DR reports.

    On X, the emergency services write that the man has cooled slightly and taken into a fire engine.

    The man, who is supposed to have been in the water for a maximum of ten minutes, had cooled down a bit, but is otherwise fine, operations manager Martin Smidt tells Ritzau.

    But had it not been for some luminescent ropes that the man could cling to, it might have turned out worse.

    “It is our task leader’s assessment that if it had not been for those ropes, the man could easily have gone under the water.The ropes have been installed recently. They hung like a garland right in the water,” says Martin Smidt.

    He says that it is most often in the summer that people fall into the water in Nyhavn.


  • Inflation in Denmark drops to 0.1 percent

    Here’s what it means for your purchasing power. Plus, a huge nature restoration agreement is reached in EU Parliament, while the Lord Mayor of Copenhagen gets a new top role in the C40: it’s time to ‘activate Copenhageners in the climate fight’, she says.


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