The Middletown Press (Middletown, CT)

World powers increasing­ly see icy Arctic as a hot property

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TASIILAQ, Greenland — From a helicopter, Greenland’s brilliant white ice and dark mountains make the desolation seem to go on forever. And the few people who live here — its whole population wouldn’t fill a football stadium — are poor, with a high rate of substance abuse and suicide.

One scientist called it the “end of the planet.”

When President Donald Trump floated the idea of buying Greenland, it was met with derision, seen as an awkward and inappropri­ate approach of an erstwhile ally.

But it might also be an Aladdin’s Cave of oil, natural gas and rare earth minerals just waiting to be tapped as the ice recedes.

The northern island and the rest of the Arctic aren’t just hotter due to global warming. As melting ice opens shipping lanes and reveals incredible riches, the region is seen as a new geopolitic­al and economic asset, with the U.S., Russia, China and others wanting in.

“An independen­t Greenland could, for example, offer basing rights to either Russia or China or both,” said Fen Hampson, head of the internatio­nal security program at the Centre for Internatio­nal Governance Innovation think tank in Waterloo, Ontario, noting the desire by some there to secede as a semiautono­mous territory of Denmark.

“I am not saying this would happen, but it is a scenario that would have major geostrateg­ic implicatio­ns, especially if the Northwest Passage becomes a transit route for shipping, which is what is happening in the Russian Arctic.”

In April, Russian President Vladimir Putin put forward an ambitious program to reaffirm his country’s presence in the Arctic, including efforts to build ports and other infrastruc­ture and expand its icebreaker fleet. Russia wants to stake its claim in the region that is believed to hold up to onefourth of the Earth’s undiscover­ed oil and gas.

China sees Greenland as a possible source of rare earths and other minerals and a port for shipping through the Arctic to the eastern U.S. It called last year for joint developmen­t of a “Polar Silk Road” as part of Beijing’s Belt and Road Initiative to build railways, ports and other facilities in dozens of countries.

But while global warming pushes the cold and ice farther north each year, experts caution that the race to the Arctic is an incredibly challengin­g marathon, not a sprint.

The melting of the Greenland ice sheet creates uncertaint­y and danger for offshore oil and gas developers, threatenin­g rigs and ships. “All that ice doesn’t suddenly melt; it creates icebergs that you have to navigate around,” said Victoria Herrmann, managing director of the Arctic Institute, a nonprofit focused on Arctic security.

On the other hand, while mining in Greenland has been expensive due to the environmen­t, developmen­t costs have fallen as the ice has melted, making it more attractive to potential buyers, she said.

Strategica­lly, Greenland forms part of what the U.S. views as a key corridor for naval operations between the Arctic and the North Atlantic. It is also part of the broader Arctic region, considered strategica­lly important because of its proximity to the U.S. and economical­ly vital for its natural resources.

 ?? Felipe Dana / Associated Press ?? In this Aug. 15 photo, a boat navigates at night next to large icebergs in eastern Greenland. As warmer temperatur­es cause the ice to retreat the Arctic region is taking on new geopolitic­al and economic importance, and not just the United States hopes to stake a claim, with Russia, China and others all wanting in.
Felipe Dana / Associated Press In this Aug. 15 photo, a boat navigates at night next to large icebergs in eastern Greenland. As warmer temperatur­es cause the ice to retreat the Arctic region is taking on new geopolitic­al and economic importance, and not just the United States hopes to stake a claim, with Russia, China and others all wanting in.

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