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Nearly 10 000 Syrian immigrants in Norway
statistikk
2016-03-03T10:00:00.000Z
Population;Population;Immigration and immigrants
en
innvbef, Immigrants and Norwegian-born to immigrant parents, foreign born, country of birth, citizenship, period of residence, immigration background, country backgroundImmigrants , Population, Population count, Population, Immigration and immigrants
false
Metabeskrivelse Immigrants, Norwegian-born to immigrant parents, immigrant background

Immigrants and Norwegian-born to immigrant parents1 January 2016

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Nearly 10 000 Syrian immigrants in Norway

At the beginning of 2016 there were 698 600 immigrants and 149 700 Norwegian-born to immigrant parents in Norway. The highest relative growth in 2015 was among immigrants from Syria.

Immigrants and Norwegian-born to immigrant parents, by country background. 1 January
2016
Immigrants and Norwegian-born to immigrant parents, totalImmigrantsNorwegian-born to immigrant parentsImmigrants and Norwegian-born to immigrant parents in per cent of total population
Total848 207698 550149 65716.3
The EU28/EEA, USA, Canada, Australia and New Zealand372 867339 46533 4027.2
Asia, Africa, Latin America, Oceania except Australia and New Zealand, and Europe except the EU28/EEA475 340359 085116 2559.1
 
EU28/EEA countries359 508326 98232 5266.9
European countries outside EU28/EEA71 16355 86315 3001.4
Africa114 30486 09328 2112.2
Asia including Turkey265 721196 11069 6115.1
North America11 07210 2718010.2
South and Central America24 25621 1193 1370.5
Oceania2 1832 112710.0

The number of immigrants and Norwegian-born to immigrant parents grew by 43 200 in 2015, which is the lowest percentage growth since 2006. Asylum seekers who have not yet been granted a residence permit in Norway are not registered as residents in the population register, and thus not included in the statistics.

Immigrants accounted for 13.4 per cent of the total population in Norway as per 1 January 2016, while Norwegian-born to immigrant parents accounted for 2.9 per cent. These two groups have a background from 223 different countries and independent regions. 

Polish immigrants still the largest group

The growth in the Polish immigrant group during 2015 was 4 800, which is the lowest percentage growth since 2005. Immigrants from Poland still made up the largest immigrant group in the country, with 95 700 persons, and now constitute almost 14 per cent of immigrants in Norway. 

The second largest group of immigrants is made up of Lithuanians, with 37 400 persons. Swedes are in third place with 37 200, followed by Somalians, with 28 300.

Immigrants from Syria have had the relatively highest growth among immigrant groups. At the beginning of 2016 there were 9 700 immigrants from Syria, while the corresponding figure for the previous year was 5 400. 

Most Norwegian- born to Pakistani, Somali and Polish parents

Norwegian-born to immigrant parents accounted for 2.9 per cent of the total population in Norway, or 149 700 persons as per 1 January 2016. Those with Pakistani parents made up the largest group of all Norwegian-born to immigrant parents, with 16 500. Norwegian-born to Somali parents were the second largest group (11 800), followed by those with parents from Poland (10 000). 

Most in Oslo

Persons with an immigrant background were resident in all Norwegian municipalities. Oslo had the largest population of immigrants and Norwegian-born to immigrant parents, both in relative terms and absolute figures. Of Oslo’s 658 400 inhabitants, 163 300 were immigrants and 50 900 were Norwegian-born to immigrant parents as per 1 January 2016. These two figures combined constitute 33 per cent of the capital’s entire population. The proportions in Drammen and Båtsfjord were also high, with 28 and 27 per cent respectively.

All suburbs in Oslo were above the national average of 16.3 per cent. The suburbs with the highest proportions of immigrants and Norwegian-born to immigrant parents were Stovner, Søndre Nordstrand and Alna, with over 50 per cent.