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Norwegian Telecommunications Administration

Telenor ASA
Allmennaksjeselskap
Traded as :
Industry Telecommunications
Founded 1855, 1970
Headquarters Fornebu, Norway
Key people
Sigve Brekke (President and CEO), Gunn Wærsted (Chairman of the Board)
Products Fixed line and mobile telephony, internet, digital television, IT services, IPTV
Revenue IncreaseNOK 131.40 billion (2016)
IncreaseNOK 46.50 billion (2016)
Profit IncreaseNOK 2.80 billion (2016)
Total assets NOK193.755 billion (end 2014)
Total equity NOK68.505 billion (end 2014)
Owner Government of Norway (54%)
Number of employees
35,121 (end 2014)
Website www.telenor.com

Telenor ASA (: ; Norwegian pronunciation: [²teːlənuːr] or [teləˈnuːr]) is a Norwegian mostly government-owned multinational telecommunications company headquartered at Fornebu in Bærum, close to Oslo. It is one of the world's largest mobile telecommunications companies with operations in Scandinavia, Eastern Europe and Asia. It has extensive broadband and TV distribution operations in four Nordic countries, and a 10-year-old research and business line for Machine-to-Machine technology. Telenor owns networks in 13 countries, and has operations in 29 countries (including their 14.6% ownership of Veon).

Telenor is listed on and had a market capitalization in November 2015 of kr 225 billion, making it the third largest company listed on the after DNB and Statoil.

Telenor started off in 1855 as a state-operated monopoly provider of telegraph services named Telegrafverket. The first Norwegian planning for a telegraph were launched within the Royal Norwegian Navy in 1848, but by 1852, the plans were public and the Parliament of Norway decided on a plan for constructing a telegraph system throughout the country. Televerket began by connecting Christiania (now Oslo) to Sweden (Norway was at that time in a union with Sweden) as well as Christiania and Drammen. By 1857 the telegraph had reached Bergen on the west coast via Sørlandet on the south coast, and by 1871 it had reached Kirkenes on the far north coast. Cable connections were opened to Denmark in 1867 and to Great Britain in 1869. The telegraph was most important for the merchant marine who now could use the electric telegraph to instantly communicate between different locations, and get a whole new advantage from better logistics.


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