British Naval Helicopters Cleared to Operate from Norwegian Warships and Arctic Bases Under New Agreement

 On 25 February 2026, Norway and the United Kingdom formalised a new helicopter cooperation agreement that allows British military helicopters to operate routinely from Norwegian naval and coast guard vessels, as well as from Norwegian bases. The accord is presented by the Norwegian Armed Forces (Forsvaret) as a follow-on to the “Lunna House” defence agreement signed in December, deepening integration between the two countries’ maritime forces and addressing Norway’s current lack of organic shipborne helicopters. According to Forsvaret, the deal signed by Rear Admiral Oliver Berdal and the First Sea Lord, General Sir Gwyn Jenkins, is intended to hard-wire British rotary-wing capabilities into Norwegian-led operations in the High North and North Atlantic. This official Norwegian source frames the agreement as both a practical measure to cover a capability gap and a significant contribution to NATO’s collective defence posture in the region. Read Full Defense News At This Link.


Norway and the United Kingdom have signed a new defence accord allowing British naval helicopters to operate routinely from Norwegian warships and Arctic bases, strengthening NATO’s maritime posture in the High North (Picture Source: British Navy / Forsvaret)


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