As I understand it, and that doesn't say a great deal as even the Swedes and Norwegians get confused over this issue, the SE is still the official CIP version and was where the 55,000 psi MAP limit was adopted for modern rifles.
The SKAN appeared as a result of the joint Scandinavian countries' initiative to adopt a single rifle model as the 'Scandinavian Target Rifle' in the 1980s. Regional competitions using the cartridge had thrown up an issue that Norwegian manufactured cartridges wouldn't chamber in some Swedish rifles, or if they did as a crush fit - a headspace issue'. When it was investigated, it appeared that the interpretation of tolerances in the original military cartridge and chamber had varied between the various users of the cartridge and it was deemed essential to agree a common version that gave guaranteed chambering in the new rifle irrespective of which country the competition was shot in and therefore which national shooting body procured the ammunition to be issued. This became the 'SKAN'.
Hence the Sauer STR200 which was chosen by the various participants as the definitive Scandinavian match rifle being chambered as per the new SKAN chamber dimensions. The differences from previous practices when they do exist are very small indeed.
So far as loadings / pressures go, the SKAN doesn't change anything from the previously adopted CIP higher-pressure 'SE' version, so both SKAN and SE data should only be used for loads in modern rifles.
There is an occasional suggestion or hint, can't put it stronger than that, that sizer dies made specifically for cartridge to be used in SKAN chambers may not 'bump' shoulders enough to allow easy chambering in a chamber whose case-head to shoulder datum line measurements were right on the short end of the old Swedish arsenal tolerances.
In any event, none of this affects how many grains of Viht N160 or N165 you stuff into a modern 6.5X55 'Swede' Tikka, Sako, Sauer or whatever. You're allowed just over 55,000 psi and although a very modest pressure by today's standards it gives more than enough performance for any British deer quarry, and more than enough MV to shoot the cartridge competitively at 1,000 yards in club level F-Class, Benchrest and similar.
People are now claiming almost the same performance levels in terms of MVs from the 6.5X47 Lapua and no doubt soon the 6.5 Creedmoor once the very strong small primer Lapua brass for that cartridge appears here (expected in April), but being an old-fashioned git I still prefer a lower stressed 'big un' to a 65,000 psi stressed 'little un'.