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Summary: - The Faroe Islands are a self-governing territory within the Kingdom of Denmark, with their own democratically elected government and a significant role in foreign policy. - They chose to stay outside the European Union when Denmark joined; foreign relations are governed by a treaty with Denmark and implemented by the Faroese Government. - Key foreign relations highlights: - Fisheries and free trade agreements with the EU; ongoing talks to deepen cooperation acro
2026-05-25Summary: The Faroe Islands have formally submitted a request to accede to the WTO as a Separate Customs Territory, marking a milestone toward independent WTO membership. The government notes this will enable full participation in the multilateral trading system. The move is supported by Minister Sirið Stenberg, who highlights the open, market-based economy and robust legal framework as strengths for a smooth accession. The WTO currently has 166 members, including four Separat
2026-05-25Summary: The Faroe Islands are pushing for a major shift in Denmark’s Kingdom, aiming to establish independent foreign policy powers while maintaining a close partnership with Denmark. A broad Faroese cross-party majority is drafting a new model that would allow the islands to join international bodies (EFTA, NAFO, NEAFC, IOC) and conduct foreign policy independently, potentially altering WTO membership and Olympic participation under their own flag. Prime Minister Aksel V. J
2026-05-25The Faroe Islands have formally applied for WTO membership as a separate customs territory, a move backed by the government in Tórshavn. If approved, the islands would join the WTO in their own right, enabling them to negotiate trade agreements and participate in dispute settlements under their own name, independently of Denmark. This aims to protect and diversify a small, export‑dependent economy focused on fisheries and marine products, and to provide a clearer, rule‑based
2026-05-25Summary: - The Faroe Islands are considering a new bill to sanction Russian vessels, aligning with EU and Norway by banning ships linked to Murman Sea Food and Norebo JSC from Faroese ports and waters. - The draft law, debated in Lagting on August 28, aims to update Faroese policy to counter hybrid threats and cooperate with international partners. - The move follows EU sanctions in May and aims to exclude four to seven Russian vessels; it could impact the long-standing fishe
2026-05-25