No it's just that the temperatures in Norway's major cities, being coastal, are more moderate than a lot of the coldest climates in North America.
Elektrotrucker just documented a long-haul electric semi trip through Scandinavian countries. In Sweden he had relatively warm temps, only -5 or so. By the time he ended up in Finland it was -35. He had a major problem keeping the cabin warm at those temps. Battery thermal management systems consumed a lot of power too. His efficiency dropped from about 1 kwh/km in warmer places (Germany) to 1.6 kwh/km, which is actually not bad considering. He was able to charge along the way and he wasn't parking this rig indoors every 6 hours to charge it.
As I said in another post, having small diesel heater (air or fluid exchange like all the youtubers are hawking these days) to heat the cabin and also the batteries would be a great way to get full utility out of EVs in harsh climates. I'm really surprised bus companies and electric semi truck makers aren't considering this. Possibly the way the laws are written they'd not qualify as an emissions free vehicle. If so, short-sighted.