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NCP complaint procedure Norway 2026

How the OECD/NCP Complaint Procedure Works in Norway, Step‑by‑step (2026 Update)

By Global Law Experts
– posted 2 days ago

The NCP complaint procedure Norway 2026 is the formal process by which any person, trade union, or non-governmental organisation can raise a grievance against a company for alleged breaches of the OECD Guidelines for Multinational Enterprises on Responsible Business Conduct. Norway’s National Contact Point (NCP) operates as an independent expert body, administratively housed under the Norwegian government but functionally separate, and handles complaints (officially termed “specific instances”) against companies that operate in or from Norway. The OECD’s February 2026 peer review of the Norwegian NCP has introduced heightened expectations around transparency, case-handling timelines, and post-decision follow-up, making it essential for companies to understand the current procedure.

This guide sets out the complete process, the documents needed for an NCP complaint, the NCP timeline in Norway, typical costs, and how the 2026 changes affect company obligations.

Overview of the OECD NCP Process and Who It Applies To

The Norwegian NCP exists to further the effectiveness of the OECD Guidelines, a set of government-backed recommendations covering human rights, employment, the environment, bribery, consumer interests, science and technology, competition, taxation, and disclosure. The NCP’s remit is to offer a non-judicial grievance mechanism: it receives complaints, assesses admissibility, offers mediation or facilitated dialogue between the parties, and, where no resolution is reached, issues a Final Statement that may include recommendations and determinations on whether the company observed the Guidelines.

Anyone can submit a complaint. There is no requirement that the complainant be directly affected. NGOs, community organisations, individuals, trade unions, and even other companies may file a specific instance. The subject of the complaint must be a company with operations in or from Norway, or a Norwegian-headquartered enterprise with activities abroad. The NCP has an independent expert structure, meaning complaints are handled strictly by non-governmental independent experts appointed for fixed terms.

What the NCP Cannot Do

The Norwegian NCP is not a court and does not have the power to issue legally binding orders, award damages, or impose fines. Its recommendations carry no direct legal force. However, the practical consequences of an adverse Final Statement, reputational damage, loss of investor confidence, procurement disqualification, and supply-chain pressure, are significant and should not be underestimated. The NCP cannot compel a company to participate in mediation, but a refusal to engage will be noted publicly in the Final Statement.

Eligibility and Prerequisites for an NCP Complaint in Norway

Before a specific instance proceeds to examination, the NCP conducts an initial assessment to determine whether the complaint meets basic admissibility criteria. Understanding these criteria is important both for potential complainants and for companies preparing a defence.

Who Can Be the Subject of a Complaint

The NCP’s jurisdiction covers any enterprise with a sufficient operational link to Norway. This includes Norwegian-registered companies, foreign companies with subsidiaries or significant operations in Norway, and Norwegian companies whose alleged non-observance of the Guidelines occurred abroad, for example, through supply-chain relationships or overseas subsidiaries. The jurisdictional test focuses on the nature and extent of the operational connection, not solely on formal incorporation.

Standing and Substantiation Requirements

Complaints submitted to the NCP must be in writing and should be substantiated. The complaint should include a description of the issue, references to the relevant chapters of the OECD Guidelines, identification of the company concerned, and an explanation of the outcome the complainant seeks to achieve. The official NCP Norway complaint form (available from Regjeringen.no) sets out the required fields. There is no filing fee.

For companies anticipating or defending against a complaint, the admissibility checklist includes the following factors that the NCP will consider:

  • Identity of the complainant. The NCP must be satisfied that the complainant has a legitimate interest, though standing is interpreted broadly.
  • Materiality of the issue. The allegation must relate to a substantive provision of the OECD Guidelines.
  • Link to company activities. There must be a demonstrable connection between the company and the conduct alleged.
  • Relevance of applicable law and parallel proceedings. The NCP may consider whether the same matter is being adjudicated elsewhere, though this alone does not bar admissibility.
  • Good faith and substantiation. The complaint must not be frivolous or vexatious.

Confidentiality Considerations

The NCP handling of specific instances is to be impartial, predictable, equitable, and compatible with the Guidelines. Confidentiality applies during the mediation or facilitation phase unless the parties agree otherwise. However, once a company has responded to a complaint, the NCP’s practice, reinforced in 2026, is to make the names of the parties public. Companies should prepare for this disclosure at an early stage.

Step-by-Step NCP Complaint Procedure: What Companies Must Do

This section provides the core procedural playbook. Each step is presented as an actionable instruction for the company’s legal and compliance team. The NCP complaint procedure in Norway follows a defined sequence: intake, formal response, admissibility assessment, mediation offer, examination, Final Statement, and follow-up.

Step Who Does It Typical Duration
Intake and legal triage Company legal and compliance team; external counsel 1–3 days
Prepare and submit formal company response / position statement Company counsel and subject-matter teams 1–4 weeks (NCP may set a deadline)
NCP admissibility / initial assessment Norwegian NCP secretariat 2–6 weeks (NCP may contact parties for information)
Offer of mediation / facilitated resolution NCP / nominated facilitator Decision within 4–8 weeks of admissibility
Mediation / facilitated resolution Parties and mediator Typically 1–6 months (longer for complex cases)
Examination and Final Statement (if no settlement) NCP (independent experts) Typically 6–12 months from admissibility
Follow-up and monitoring Company and NCP (if recommended) 6–24 months post-Final Statement

These durations are typical ranges observed in recent Norwegian NCP cases and OECD guidance. Specific timetables are set by the NCP on a case-by-case basis.

Step 1: Immediate Intake and Legal Triage (First 24–72 Hours)

The moment a company receives notice of an NCP complaint, whether by direct NCP communication, media inquiry, or third-party alert, the following actions should be taken without delay:

  1. Designate an internal lead. Assign a senior individual (typically the general counsel or head of compliance) as the single point of coordination. All communications with the NCP should flow through this person.
  2. Preserve documents. Issue an immediate litigation-style hold on all documents, emails, contracts, and communications relating to the subject matter of the complaint. Instruct relevant staff not to delete or alter records.
  3. Notify the board and insurers. Brief the board of directors or relevant governance committee. If the company holds directors’ and officers’ insurance or professional indemnity cover, notify underwriters promptly, late notification can jeopardise coverage.
  4. Engage external counsel. Instruct lawyers with experience in the OECD NCP process immediately. Counsel will assist with privilege review, evidence preservation, and drafting the initial response.
  5. Prepare an incident timeline. Compile a preliminary chronology of the events alleged in the complaint, identifying key dates, witnesses, and documents.
  6. Draft an initial public statement plan. Coordinate with communications advisers to prepare holding statements and Q&A for media or stakeholder inquiries. Do not comment substantively until the position statement is finalised.

Step 2: Formal Company Response to the NCP (Position Statement)

The NCP will invite the company to respond to the complaint. Aim to submit the company’s formal position statement within 14–28 days of receiving the NCP’s notice, unless the NCP sets a different deadline. The position statement is the company’s primary opportunity to shape the NCP’s initial assessment and should be structured clearly:

  • Executive summary. A concise statement of the company’s position (one to two pages).
  • Factual timeline. A detailed, referenced chronology with supporting evidence.
  • Due diligence carried out. Description of policies, risk assessments, audits, and remedial steps already taken.
  • Legal and contractual context. Relevant contractual arrangements, regulatory approvals, and parallel proceedings.
  • Corrective actions proposed. If the company has already begun remediation, describe the measures, responsible owners, and implementation timeline.
  • Proposed remedy timeline. Where appropriate, offer a framework for resolution, this signals good faith and can influence the NCP’s approach to mediation.

This is also the stage to identify factual inaccuracies in the complaint and to propose named contacts for any mediation or facilitated dialogue the NCP may offer.

Step 3: NCP Mediation and Facilitated Resolution

If the NCP accepts the complaint for further examination, it will typically offer mediation or facilitated dialogue as a first step toward resolution. The NCP mediation steps in Norway proceed as follows:

  1. Accept or decline mediation. The company is not compelled to participate, but a refusal will be recorded in the Final Statement. Industry observers expect that the 2026 peer review recommendations will increase scrutiny of companies that decline mediation without credible justification.
  2. Appoint senior representatives. Assign individuals with genuine authority to negotiate and commit the company. Junior representatives without decision-making power undermine the process and the company’s credibility.
  3. Agree ground rules. The parties and the NCP (or appointed facilitator) will establish terms of reference, scope, confidentiality, timelines, and logistics.
  4. Negotiate in good faith. Propose concrete, measurable remedial steps with defined KPIs and timelines. Where feasible, document any agreement in a binding commercial contract, this provides certainty for both parties and facilitates monitoring.
  5. Draft a settlement agreement. If mediation succeeds, the NCP may publish a statement confirming that an agreement was reached, typically without disclosing its terms unless the parties consent.

If mediation fails or the company declines, the NCP proceeds to full examination.

Step 4: NCP Examination and Final Statement

Where mediation does not resolve the matter, the NCP conducts an examination and issues a Final Statement. During the examination phase, the NCP may request additional information, documents, or meetings with the company. The company should:

  • Respond promptly to all NCP requests. Delays or non-cooperation may result in adverse inferences.
  • Provide clarifications. Address factual or analytical points raised by the NCP in a structured, evidence-based format.
  • Plan for reputational management. The Final Statement will be published. Prepare internal and external communications plans in advance of its release.
  • Implement voluntary remedial measures. Actions taken before the Final Statement may be acknowledged positively by the NCP.

The Final Statement sets out the NCP’s findings on whether the company observed the OECD Guidelines and may include specific recommendations. Under the NCP’s current practice, consistent with ResponsibleBusiness.no case publication records from early 2026, the names of the parties are made public after the company has responded to the complaint, and the full Final Statement is published on the NCP’s website.

Step 5: Follow-Up and Monitoring After the Final Statement

The NCP complaint procedure does not necessarily end with the Final Statement. Where the NCP has made recommendations, it may request follow-up reports from the company, typically at intervals of 6–12 months. To manage this effectively:

  • Establish a cross-functional remediation team. Include representatives from legal, compliance, operations, and communications. Assign clear accountability for each recommendation.
  • Implement remediation with measurable KPIs. Track and document progress against each NCP recommendation.
  • Report to the NCP on schedule. Provide written follow-up reports at the intervals specified. Proactive reporting demonstrates good faith and can reduce ongoing reputational exposure.
  • Communicate progress to stakeholders. Where appropriate, publish progress reports or engage directly with the complainant and affected communities.

Documents Needed for an NCP Complaint Response

Assembling the correct documentation at the earliest stage is critical. The table below sets out the complete company response checklist for an NCP specific instance in Norway.

Document Notes
Company position statement Executive summary, factual timeline, legal context, corrective actions; PDF or Word, signed by authorised representative.
Chronology of events Internal timeline with dates, key actors, and witnesses.
Contracts and supply-chain agreements Copies of relevant contracts and terms with vendors/subcontractors; redact commercially sensitive data as advised by counsel.
Due diligence records Supplier audits, risk assessments, prior remediation steps, human rights and environmental policy documents.
Internal investigation report If an internal investigation was carried out: method, scope, findings, and limitations. Exercise caution with legally privileged material.
Communications log Relevant emails, meeting minutes, press releases, and stakeholder correspondence.
Remediation plan / corrective action plan Proposed remedies, responsible owners, KPIs, and implementation timeline.
Evidence files Photographs, audit reports, third-party expert reports, organised in an indexed electronic folder with reference tags matching the position statement.
Board and insurer notification records Confirmation that the board and insurers were notified, with dates.
NCP complaint form (if initiating) Official Regjeringen complaint form (English .docx). Not required if responding to an existing complaint, but useful for understanding the complaint structure.

Privilege note: Before disclosing any document to the NCP, conduct a privilege review. Material created for the purpose of obtaining legal advice or in contemplation of legal proceedings may be protected. Mark potentially privileged documents as “legal advice privileged, review before disclosure” and consult counsel. This is particularly important for internal investigation reports and communications between the company and its lawyers.

The official NCP complaint form, available from Regjeringen.no, requires complainants to identify the company, describe the issue, reference the relevant OECD Guidelines chapters, and explain the outcome sought. Companies preparing a response should obtain a copy of the form to understand exactly what information the NCP received.

NCP Timeline Norway: Key Deadlines and Internal Milestones

There is no single statutory deadline that governs every NCP complaint. Timelines are determined by the NCP on a case-by-case basis. However, the following internal milestones represent recommended best practice for companies seeking to respond effectively to the NCP complaint procedure in Norway.

Milestone Recommended Internal Deadline
Incident triage and engagement of counsel Within 24–72 hours of receiving the NCP notice
First draft position statement Within 7–14 days
Final position statement and evidence bundle submitted to NCP Within 14–28 days (unless the NCP sets a shorter deadline)
Decision on whether to accept mediation Within 2–4 weeks of the NCP’s offer
Establish remediation plan (if mediation accepted) 30–90 days from mediation agreement, depending on remedy scope
Prepare for public disclosure / press Q&A Concurrent with position statement submission

The overall duration of an NCP specific instance, from complaint filing through Final Statement, typically ranges from 6 to 18 months, depending on case complexity, the willingness of parties to engage in mediation, and NCP capacity. Follow-up monitoring can extend for an additional 6–24 months. Companies should always check the specific NCP notice and the official pages on Regjeringen.no for any prescriptive deadlines set in their particular case.

For communications planning, assume that the names of the parties will become public relatively early in the process, typically once the company has submitted its response. This means the media and stakeholder communications plan must be operational before or concurrent with the position statement submission.

Costs, Fees, and Remedies: What Companies Should Budget

The NCP does not charge a filing fee to complainants, and companies subject to a complaint are not charged a participation fee. However, companies should budget for the following categories of expenditure. The figures below are estimates for planning purposes and will vary significantly based on case complexity.

Item Typical Estimate Notes
External legal counsel (initial response) €3,000 – €15,000 Includes triage, drafting position statement, and initial meetings with NCP.
Mediation / facilitator fees €2,000 – €15,000 per day May be shared between parties; the NCP may cover certain facilitation costs, verify directly with the NCP.
Independent expert / audit report €5,000 – €50,000+ For technical supply-chain investigations or environmental assessments.
Remediation implementation Variable Depends on the nature of the remedy: supply-chain restructuring, compensation, operational changes.
PR / communications support €2,000 – €20,000 External crisis communications, stakeholder engagement, and media management.

Regarding remedies NCP Norway can recommend: the NCP may recommend that a company change its policies, implement specific due diligence measures, provide remediation to affected parties, or improve stakeholder engagement. These recommendations are not legally binding but carry substantial reputational weight. Remedial payments or compensation may have tax implications across jurisdictions, companies should consult tax counsel on the deductibility and reporting obligations of any settlement or remediation expenditure.

What Changes in 2026: The OECD Peer Review and Its Practical Impact

The OECD published its peer review of the Norwegian NCP in February 2026, assessing conformity with the core effectiveness criteria for NCPs and the Implementation Procedures of the OECD Guidelines. The peer review introduced several recommendations that have immediate procedural implications for companies involved in or anticipating an NCP complaint in Norway:

  • Earlier public disclosure of parties. The NCP’s existing practice of publishing party names once the company has responded has been reinforced. Early indications suggest the NCP may move toward even earlier disclosure in line with the peer review’s transparency recommendations. Companies should prepare public statements before submitting their position to the NCP.
  • Stronger follow-up and monitoring. The peer review recommends that the NCP enhance its follow-up activities after issuing Final Statements. The likely practical effect will be more detailed and more frequent follow-up reporting requirements for companies, remediation plans should include measurable KPIs and defined reporting intervals.
  • Improved case-handling timelines. The peer review recommends that the NCP communicate punctually with all parties and adhere to suggested timetables for each stage of the procedure. Companies can expect clearer deadline expectations and should plan internal resourcing accordingly.
  • Enhanced promotional and awareness activities. The NCP is expected to increase outreach, which industry observers expect will lead to a higher volume of complaints in coming years.

Companies operating in or from Norway should review their existing due diligence frameworks and complaint-response protocols against these updated expectations.

Common Pitfalls in the NCP Complaint Procedure and How to Avoid Them

  • Late or incomplete response. Failing to respond within the NCP’s deadline, or submitting a vague, unsubstantiated reply, undermines credibility from the outset. Mitigation: maintain a ready-made evidence pack and activate the 24–72-hour intake protocol immediately upon notice.
  • Over-disclosure of privileged material. Disclosing legal advice or investigation reports without review can waive privilege and expose the company to risk in parallel proceedings. Mitigation: conduct a thorough privilege review with counsel before any disclosure to the NCP.
  • Refusing mediation without justification. A blanket refusal to participate in facilitated dialogue will be noted in the Final Statement and viewed negatively by stakeholders. Mitigation: engage constructively, even if mediation is ultimately declined for documented reasons.
  • Accepting open-ended remediation commitments. Agreeing to vague or unmeasurable remedies creates ongoing exposure. Mitigation: propose specific KPIs, fixed timelines, and document commitments in binding commercial agreements.
  • Poor stakeholder communications. Silence or inconsistent messaging amplifies reputational damage. Mitigation: prepare pre-approved Q&A documents and designate trained spokespeople before the NCP process becomes public.
  • Underestimating the follow-up phase. The process does not end with the Final Statement. Mitigation: establish a cross-functional team to implement and report on recommendations from the outset.
  • Treating the NCP as adversarial. The NCP is a facilitation mechanism, not a court. Mitigation: approach the process as an opportunity to demonstrate responsible business conduct and resolve legitimate concerns.
  • Failing to involve insurers early. Late notification to D&O or professional indemnity insurers can jeopardise coverage for legal costs and settlements. Mitigation: notify insurers within the first 72 hours.

Need Legal Advice?

This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Sigurd Knudtzon at Wahl-Larsen Advokatfirma AS, a member of the Global Law Experts network.

Sources

  1. OECD, National Contact Point Peer Review: Norway (2026)
  2. Regjeringen.no, NCP Norway Brochure (English PDF)
  3. Regjeringen.no, NCP Norway Complaint Form (English .docx)
  4. ResponsibleBusiness.no, NCP Norway Specific Instances and Guidance
  5. OECD Watch, NCP Norway Profile and Indicators
  6. Eye on ESG, Norwegian NCP Final Statement Commentary (January 2026)
  7. University of Oslo, Sustainability Law Blog (February 2026)

FAQs

How does an OECD/NCP complaint process work in Norway?
A complainant files a written specific instance with the Norwegian NCP. The NCP assesses admissibility, invites the company to respond, and offers mediation or facilitated dialogue. If no settlement is reached, the NCP examines the case and publishes a Final Statement with recommendations. The process is non-judicial and recommendations are not legally binding.
Within 24–72 hours: designate an internal lead, issue a document hold, notify the board and insurers, and engage external counsel. Within 14–28 days: submit a formal position statement with supporting evidence. Thereafter: respond to the NCP’s mediation offer and cooperate with the examination process.
The NCP’s admissibility assessment typically takes 2–6 weeks. If mediation is offered and accepted, facilitated dialogue may last 1–6 months. If the case proceeds to a Final Statement, the overall process typically takes 6–12 months from admissibility. Follow-up monitoring can add a further 6–24 months. Specific timelines are set by the NCP on a case-by-case basis.
The NCP can recommend policy changes, enhanced due diligence, remediation for affected parties, and improved stakeholder engagement. These recommendations are not legally binding, the NCP is not a court and cannot award damages or impose fines. However, adverse findings carry significant reputational consequences and may influence procurement decisions, investor relations, and regulatory scrutiny.
Yes. Any company with a sufficient operational link to Norway, such as a subsidiary, branch, joint venture, or significant supply-chain relationship, can be the subject of a specific instance. The jurisdictional test focuses on the nature and extent of the operational connection, not solely on the place of incorporation.
The NCP may proceed with its assessment or examination based on the information available, which may include only the complainant’s submissions. The Final Statement may note the company’s non-cooperation. Companies that anticipate difficulty meeting a deadline should contact the NCP immediately to request an extension, documenting the request in writing.
Immediately upon receipt of an NCP notice, ideally within 24–72 hours. Early engagement ensures that the document hold is properly implemented, privilege is preserved, and the position statement is prepared to the required standard within the NCP’s deadline.
Mediation discussions are generally treated as confidential by the NCP. However, the NCP may publish a statement confirming that a specific instance was resolved through mediation and whether an agreement was reached, typically without disclosing the terms. The parties may agree to publish further details. Companies should negotiate confidentiality terms explicitly as part of the mediation ground rules.
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How the OECD/NCP Complaint Procedure Works in Norway, Step‑by‑step (2026 Update)

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