Lodi News-Sentinel

Greenland scraps all future oil exploratio­n on climate concerns

- Morten Buttler

Greenland dropped all plans for future oil exploratio­n on environmen­tal grounds, saying the price of extraction was “too high.”

The island’s socialist-led government, in office since April, has made climate concerns central to its legislativ­e program. While the decision to scrap planned exploratio­n is a win for environmen­tal groups, it cuts off potential investment­s that could have aided efforts to gain economic independen­ce from Denmark.

The government “has decided to cease issuing new licenses for oil and gas exploratio­n,” it said in a statement. “This step has been taken for the sake of our nature, for the sake of our fisheries, for the sake of our tourism industry, and to focus our business on sustainabl­e potentials.”

Ten years ago, Greenland had become a hotspot for drillers as a commodity-price boom attracted not only oil explorers but miners of diamonds, iron, rare earths and other metals. But crude’s subsequent crash made extraction uneconomic offshore — where drilling would be hampered by large floating icebergs — and the official ban now puts an end to dreams of energy riches.

Although the Inuit Ataqatigii­t ruling party campaigned on seeking greater autonomy from Denmark — which still oversees Greenland’s foreign, defense and monetary policies — its program has yet to offer a sustainabl­e alternativ­e to Danish economic support for its 56,000 inhabitant­s, which amounts to about $600 million a year.

The decision to abandon oil exploratio­n comes amid increasing­ly alarming signs of global warming for Greenlande­rs. Average sea levels have risen about 9 inches since 1880, and about a quarter of that increase comes from ice melting in the Greenland and Antarctica ice sheets, along with land-based glaciers elsewhere, according to a study published in Nature in May.

Greenland’s west coast alone is estimated to contain about 18 billion barrels of oil, according to a recent study from the Geological Survey of Denmark and Greenland.

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