Norwegian drinkers knocked back more alcohol in 2002 than at any point in the past hundred years
Published:
15 July 2003 y., Tuesday
Norwegian drinkers knocked back more alcohol in 2002 than at any point in the past hundred years, the Aftenposten daily reported on Monday.
Although Norwegians are moderate drinkers compared to some of their European counterparts, average intake last year reached 5.92 litres of pure alcohol per person.
The record of recent times had been set in 1980, when Norwegians ingurgitated an average 5.8 litres of alcohol each. The year 2003 was also set to become a record breaker, according to industry experts.
Wine and spirits topped the list of favourite Norwegian beverages, while beer consumption has been steadily slipping, the report said.
Aftenposten's figures were based on data from the state alcohol retail monopoly, the national brewers association and the state institute for research on intoxication. They claim to include alcohol purchases outside the official channels, such as duty free purchases abroad, illegal brewing and black-market sales.
Norway operates a strict alcohol retail policy, channelling all retail sales through official outlets with limited opening hours and levying high taxes in a bid to discourage alcohol abuse.
Šaltinis:
bday.co.za
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.
The most popular articles
Rare panda cow is born in Cilorado with markings that resemble a much larger panda bear.
more »
New Zealand Air Force releases thousands of UFO files.
more »
A zoo in Surabaya, Indonesia welcomes a newborn Sumatran elephant.
more »
Take one angry leopard trapped for several hours down an Indian village well, add water, and stand well back while a team of rescuers work out how to save it.
more »
A new restaurant in eastern China uses robots to serve and entertain customers.
more »
Japanese jump start holiday celebrations for the Year of the Rabbit by dressing up their own pet rabbits.
more »
A baby gorilla born at a zoo in northern Germany surprises zookeepers, who expected a different female to give birth.
more »
Swiss doctors say a 23-year-old German whose stunt went wrong during a live T.V. broadbcast will never again walk normally.
more »
Twin turtles surprise visitors at a nature reserve in Turkey.
more »
Israeli scientists and veterinarians develop a new, non invasive dental treatment for kangaroos suffering from deadly Lumpy Jaw disease.
more »