Edmonton Journal

As climate change warms the North, Greenland discovers vast mineral wealth

Climate change is unlocking potentiall­y vast mineral wealth

- ELISABETH ROSENTHAL

NARSAQ, GREENLAND – As icebergs in the Kayak Harbour pop and hiss while melting away, this remote Arctic town and its culture are also disappeari­ng in a changing climate.

Narsaq’s largest employer, a shrimp factory, closed a few years ago after the crustacean­s fled north to cooler water. Where once there were eight commercial fishing vessels, there is now one. As a result, the population here, one of southern Greenland’s major towns, has been halved to 1,500 in just a decade. Suicides are up.

“Fishing is the heart of this town,” said Hans Kaspersen, 63, a fisherman. “Lots of people have lost their livelihood­s.”

But even as warming temperatur­es are upending traditiona­l Greenlandi­c life, they are also offering up intriguing new opportunit­ies for this state of 57,000 — perhaps nowhere more so than here in Narsaq.

Vast new deposits of minerals and gems are being discovered as Greenland’s massive ice cap recedes, forming the basis of a potentiall­y lucrative mining industry. One of the world’s largest deposits of rare earth metals — essential for manufactur­ing cellphones, wind turbines and electric cars — sits just outside Narsaq.

This could be momentous for Greenland, which has long relied on half a billion dollars a year in welfare payments from Denmark, its parent state. Mining profits could help Greenland become economical­ly self-sufficient and render it the first sovereign nation created by global warming.

“One of our goals is to obtain independen­ce,” said Vittus Qujaukitso­q, a prominent union leader.

But the rapid transition from a society of individual fishermen and hunters to an economy supported by corporate mining raises difficult questions. How would Greenland’s insular settlement­s tolerate an influx of thousands of Polish or Chinese constructi­on workers, as has been proposed? Will mining despoil a natural environmen­t essential to Greenland’s national identity — the whales and seals, the silent icy fiords, and mythic polar bears? Can fisherman reinvent themselves as miners?

“I think mining will be the future, but this is a difficult phase,” said Jens B. Frederikse­n, Greenland’s housing and infrastruc­ture minister. “It’s a plan that not everyone wants. It’s about traditions, the freedom of a boat, family profession­s.”

The Arctic is warming even faster than other parts of the planet, and the rapidly melting ice is causing alarm among scientists about sea-level rise. Already, winter pack ice that covers the fiords is no longer stable enough for dog sledding and snowmobile traffic in many areas. Winter fishing, essential to feeding families, is becoming hazardous or impossible.

It has long been known that Greenland sat upon vast mineral lodes, and the Danish government has mapped them intermitte­ntly for decades. Niels Bohr, Denmark’s Nobel Prize-winning nuclear physicist, visited Narsaq in 1957 because of its uranium deposits.

But previous attempts at mining mostly failed, proving too expensive in the inclement conditions. Now, warming has altered the equation.

Greenland’s Bureau of Minerals and Petroleum, charged with managing the boom, currently has 150 active licences for mineral exploratio­n, up from 20 a decade ago. Altogether, companies spent $100 million exploring Greenland’s deposits last year, and several are applying for licences to begin constructi­on on new mines, bearing gold, iron and zinc and rare earths. There are also foreign companies exploring for offshore oil.

“For me, I wouldn’t mind if the whole ice cap disappears,” said Ole Christians­en, the chief executive of NunamMiner­als, Greenland’s largest homegrown mining company, as he picked his way along a proposed gold mining site up the fiord from Nuuk, Greenland’s capital. “As it melts, we’re seeing new places with very attractive geology.”

The Greenlandi­c government hopes mining will provide new revenue. In granting Greenland home rule in 2009, Denmark froze its annual subsidy, which is scheduled to be decreased further in the coming years.

Here in Narsaq, a collection of brightly painted homes bordered by spectacula­r fiords, two foreign companies are applying to the government for permission to mine.

“This is huge; we could be mining this for the next 100 years,” said Eric Sondergaar­d, a geologist with the Australian-owned company Greenland Minerals and Energy, who was on the outskirts of Narsaq one day recently, picking at rocks on a moon-like plateau rich with rare earth ore.

That proximity promises employment, and the company is already schooling some young men in drilling and in English, the internatio­nal language of mine operations. It plans to

“For me, I wouldn’t mind if the whole ice cap disappears.”

OLE CHRISTIANS­EN, MINE EXECUTIVE

build a processing plant, a new port and more roads. Narsaq’s tiny airport, previously threatened with closing from lack of traffic, could be expanded. A local landlord is contemplat­ing converting an abandoned apartment block into a hotel.

“There will be a lot of people coming from outside and that will be a big challenge since Greenlandi­c culture has been isolated,” said Jasper Schroder, a student home in Narsaq from university in Denmark.

Still, he supports the mine and hopes it will provide jobs and stem the rash of suicides, particular­ly among his peers; Greenland has one of the highest suicide rates in the world.

“People in this culture don’t want to be a burden to their families if they can’t contribute,” he said.

But not all are convinced of the benefits of mining. “Of course the mine will help the local economy and will help Greenland, but I’m not so sure if it will be good for us,” said Dorothea Rodgaard, who runs a local guest house. “We are worried about the loss of nature.”

For developmen­t to go forward, the government will have to revise a long-standing “zero tolerance” policy for the mining of radioactiv­e material, an outgrowth of Denmark’s adamantly anti-nuclear stance. Rare earth metals are nearly always intertwine­d with some radioactiv­e elements.

Simon Simonsen, the mayor of South Greenland, which includes Narsaq, said that most residents of the area had overcome initial fears and accepted the levels of radioactiv­e material involved.

“If we don’t get this mine,” he said, “Narsaq will just get smaller and smaller.”

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 ?? ANDREW TESTA/ NEW YORK TIMES ?? A fisherman sails past melting icebergs in Narsaq, Greenland. As warming temperatur­es upend traditiona­l life, they are also offering up intriguing new opportunit­ies for a lucrative mining economy.
ANDREW TESTA/ NEW YORK TIMES A fisherman sails past melting icebergs in Narsaq, Greenland. As warming temperatur­es upend traditiona­l life, they are also offering up intriguing new opportunit­ies for a lucrative mining economy.

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