The Norwegian Government is doing its best to keep
the oil industry under control. A new law limits exploration to an area south of
the southern end of the long coastline; production limits have been laid down
(though these have already been raised); and oil companies have not been allowed
to employ more than a limited number of foreign workers. But the oil industry
has a way of getting over such problems, and few people believe that the
Government will be able to hold things back for long. As an Norwegian politician
said last week:"We will soon be changed beyond all recognition. "
Ever since the war, the Government has been carrying out a program of
development in the area north of the Arctic Circle. During the past few years
this program has had a great deal of success. Tromso has been built up into a
local capital with a university, a large hospital and a healthy industry. But
the oil industry has already started to draw people south, and within a few
years the whole northern policy could be in ruins. The effects
of the oil industry would not be limited to the north, however. With nearly 100
percent employment, everyone can see a situation developing in which the service
industries and the tourist industry will lose more of their workers to the oil
industry. Some smaller industries might even disappear altogether when it
becomes cheaper to buy goods from abroad. The real argument
over oil is its threat to the Norwegian way of life. Farmers and fishermen do
not make up most of the population, but they are an important part of it,
because Norwegians see in them many of the qualities that they regard with pride
as essentially Norwegian. And it is the farmers and the fishermen who are most
critical of the oil industry because of the damage that it might cause to the
countryside and to the sea. Norwegian farmers and fishermen have an important influence because
______.
A. they form such a large part of Norwegian ideal
B. they regard oil as a threat to the Norwegian way of life
C. their work is so useful to the rest of Norwegian society
D. their lives and values represent the Norwegian ideal