Nordic cooperation: What is the Nordic Council?
Nordic cooperation involves the Nordic Council, which brings together parliamentarians from the five Nordic countries, and the Nordic Council of Ministers, a forum for intergovernmental cooperation
The Nordic Council was established in 1952 by Denmark, Iceland, Norway, and Sweden. Finland joined in 1955, with the Danish autonomous territories of the Faroe Islands and Greenland, and the Finnish autonomous territory of Åland, joining later. It brings together parliamentarians from its member states, with 87 members in total.
The Nordic Council of Ministers was established in 1971, as a forum for government ministers to meet (in separate ministerial formations). The Nordic Prime Ministers also meet annually.
Nordic cooperation was formalised in the Helsinki Treaty of 1962, which has been amended several times.
The two bodies have brought cooperation across a range of policy areas including economic policy, the labour market, culture, education and research, transport and communications, and the environment. Initiatives from the Nordic Council have included the establishment of the Nordic passport union, providing for passport-free travel and the right to live and work across the area for Nordic citizens, and joint transport projects and uniform postal and telecoms rates. More recently there has been a focus on the challenges posed by climate change and collaboration to promote a green transition.
Defence and security cooperation was initially challenging for the Nordic countries due to different positions and strategies adopted during the Cold War. However, there has been increased discussion in the Nordic Council and Nordic Council of Ministers of security cooperation since the 1990s.
There has been a renewed focus on defence and security in recent Nordic Council sessions, with a new international strategy adopted in March 2023 in light of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine and the applications by Finland and Sweden to join NATO (meaning all five Nordic Council members would be NATO members).
In 2024, the Nordic Council adopted recommendations to update the Helsinki Treaty to include defence and security policy and climate policy, and to strengthen the participation of the Faroe Islands, Greenland, and Åland in Nordic cooperation. Nordic governments have subsequently agreed to initiate a process to update the Treaty.
There has been increased international cooperation between the Nordic countries, neighbouring countries and other international bodies in recent years. This includes linkages between the Nordic Assembly and the Baltic Assembly which brings together parliamentarians from the Baltic countries, and coordination among leaders of the Nordic and Baltic countries (the NB8).