- Created by Solene DRUGEOT on Jun 29, 2021
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Ministry of Government Administration and Modernisation (KMD) The Norwegian Agency for Public and Financial Management (DFØ) Regulation on electronic invoicing in public procurement (FOR-2019-04-01-444), Established by the Ministry of Local Government and Modernization on 1 April 2019 Digitisation circular H-5/19 (Digitaliseringsrundskrivet), Official publication: 2019-12-20 Reference directory for IT standards in the public sector (“Referansekatalogen for IT-standarder i offentlig sektor”) YES Use of the extra year for compliance of non-central entities (by ) NO Receiving and processing: Central, regional and local public contracting authorities Submitting: Economic operators The European standard on eInvoicing is fully implemented Legacy format: EHF (Elektronisk Handelsformat)[1] Peppol eDelivery Network YES - Peppol BIS Billing 3. From 2011 onward, all central authorities are required to receive and process invoices electronically. In 2012, it became mandatory for the suppliers of central government entities to send invoices electronically, being compliant with the European standard on eInvoicing. According to FOR-2019-04-01-444, from 2 April 2019, it is mandatory for all public contracting authorities to receive and process eInvoices. Public entities’ suppliers are required to send eInvoices. Electronic Invoices must comply with Directive 2014/55/EU on public procurement using EHF/Peppol BIS Billing and the Peppol eDelivery network[2]. Additionally, the central government contracting authorities issuing invoices are mandated to offer to send EHF/Peppol BIS Billing 3.0 invoices to business recipients. Norway is dependent on both the Peppol BIS 3.0 standard and the Peppol eDelivery Network – particularly for cross-border transactions. Both economic operators and contracting authorities in Norway rely on Peppol Access Point (AP) service providers to achieve compliance with national regulations. These service providers offer solutions for creating, submitting, transmitting, receiving, and processing eInvoices. A list of eInvoicing service providers is publicly available. All transactions can be handled through a single provider. There is no need to establish new partner bilateral connections. In the public sector, the main eInvoicing management solutions are Unit4 /Agresso, VISMA, Basware (Contempus) and SAP. There are more than 60 different Peppol BIS compliant solutions used in the private sector. Economic operators can submit eInvoices either by using their internal Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP) or accounting systems or by using approved eInvoicing solution providers. The Norwegian eProcurement infrastructure is built around the Peppol Business Interoperability Specifications (BIS) and the Peppol eDelivery Network. In addition to Peppol BIS document format, EHF (Elektronisk Handelsformat) format is also recognise by Norwegian public bodies. Both are based on UBL (Universal Business Language). The Norwegian Government Agency for Financial Management (DFØ) receives invoices on behalf of nearly 200 of the country's central government entities. The DFØ. The Norwegian Digitalisation Agency authorises Norwegian-registered Access Points (AP) and operates the ELMA registry (a Peppol Service Metadata Publisher), with nearly 200,000 receivers by January 2021, containing the identities and receiving capabilities of all Norwegian public entities and economic operators that communicate using the Peppol eDelivery Network. Today, the eInvoicing process is mostly automated. Most public entities have an economic system that can handle Peppol invoices. The electronic follow-up systems (invoice flow systems) are used for the approval of the invoice before it is payed. While most of the payments are done electronically for all sub-central levels, the use of eOrder is still in its beginning. The use of Peppol has made the public administration more interested in the use of electronic solutions. The possibility to automate more processes by using eOrder, eCatalogue and eInvoice together is a goal for the public administration. As of 2 April 2019, it is compulsory for all contracting authorities, central and non-central public bodies, to be able to receive and process eInvoices. Likewise, public entities’ suppliers of such public entities are required to send eInvoices1. The eInvoicing strategy is Peppol-based, it is used by 99% of the contracting authorities on 2020[3]. The non-domestic eInvoices are received through Peppol formats and network. The CIUS in place is the Peppol CIUS. There is no specific communication as the Peppol CIUS corresponds to the EN to be used. The target benefits of implementing eInvoicing at sub-central level is the cost and operational savings, the reduction of administrative burden and the contribution to process automation. Norway has fully implemented the European standard on eInvoicing. EHF is used exclusively between Norwegian organisations. Meanwhile the more popular Peppol BIS format is used for both cross-border and national transactions, with CEF Digital estimating that the Peppol format is currently used by approximately 99% of contracting authorities. From 2020, a monitoring system has been implemented with the aim of tracking the use of eInvoices with central and non-central bodies in Norway[3]. The monitoring strategy is in place at both central and sub-central levels. The available data are expressed in number of invoices that are submitted electronically. Currently around 90% of all invoices sent to Norwegian public entities are eInvoices. Additional information Norstella community offers the Oxalis open-source sample implementations for Peppol Access Points, which are widely used by solution providers across Europe. At the level of the government, payments are done electronically. The government is using ISO20022 with electronic payment (ePayment) via the Peppol network. Archiving electronically is possible in Norway. There is an ongoing study for developing an archiving solution for eInvoices via the Peppol network. Last updated:
Jun 29, 2021 10:48Responsible Legislation Transposed the Directive 2014/55/EU Mandatory for Standard(s) Platform Use of CIUS and/or Extensions Legislation
eInvoicing platform and eInvoicing management solutions
Approach for receiving and processing eInvoices
eInvoicing implementation in sub-central level contracting authorities
Status on the implementation of the European Standard on eInvoicing (EN)
Monitoring eInvoicing implementation
Are you aware of further developments on eInvoicing B2G in this country? Contact us via the link Something wrong with this page? at the bottom of this page.
You can also access the 2016, 2017, 2018, 2019 and 2020 eInvoicing Country Sheets via the eInvoicing User Community.
UPDATED
Status | UPDATED |
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Reviewer | Jan Mærøe |
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