Kuwait Times

Mining firms from China to Canada watch as Greenland holds election

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COPENHAGEN: With melting ice expanding access to the Arctic, investors from China to Canada are watching Greenland’s election for signs of the political will to get a flagging mining program on the island back on track. Greenland is hoping rising commodity prices can help attract foreign investment and get its fragile economy up to speed to realize a longterm goal of independen­ce from Denmark.

Hype about a possible mining boom in Greenland after it achieved self-rule from Denmark in 2009 faded in a morass of red tape and a commodity price slump around five years ago. It left the economy reliant on fishing and grants from Denmark. But with the country’s sole producing mine starting up last year - a ruby pink sapphire mine operated by Norway’s LNS Group - and Canada’s Hudson Resource’s anorthosit­e project due to begin operations this year, locals are again hoping more investment­s will follow.

Improved access to and from the Arctic island as the ice melts, and a more favorable investment climate, would go some way to alleviate the barriers to business of perpetual winter darkness and temperatur­es reaching as low as minus 50 Celsius. With that in mind, a central theme for the new government elected on Tuesday will be to decide whether it wants to shift focus away from Denmark and strengthen economic and diplomatic ties with other countries, including China.

Chinese interest in Greenland comes after Beijing laid out its ambitions to form a “Polar Silk Road” by developing shipping lanes opened up by global warming and encouragin­g enterprise­s to build infrastruc­ture in the Arctic. The main contenders to lead the next government are Prime Minister Kim Kielsen of the social-democratic Siumut party and Sara Olsvig of the left-wing Inuit Ataqatigii­t party (IA).

The most recent poll shows that the two parties are likely to continue working together in a coalition. “A new government led by Kielsen and Siumut but without IA will create more openness towards attracting investment­s, including from China,” said Rasmus Leander Nielsen, assistant professor at the University of Greenland in Nuuk.

“IA is more skeptical. They want mining activity, but have more emphasis on the environmen­t,” Nielsen said. Demokrater­ne, Greenland’s third biggest party, and the new Nunatta Qitornai party are also pro-mining.

Chinese investment

Greenland, whose capital Nuuk is closer to New York than the Danish capital Copenhagen, is more than three times larger than the US state of Texas. But with a population of just 56,000, it is the most sparsely populated nation on earth. It has shortliste­d a Chinese consortium to expand three airports, causing concern in Denmark which has given its ally the United States wide military access - just one of many sources of friction as independen­ce rhetoric sharpens. China’s Shenghe Resources is also already partnering with Greenland Minerals and Energy to develop a rare earth and uranium project. Ironbark Zinc has asked state-owned China Nonferrous Metal Mining Group to help it finance and develop a zinc and lead project.

But developmen­t in the mining sector has so far been slowed by a lack of infrastruc­ture and by heavy red tape, observers say. Assistant professor Nielsen said he would consider the uranium project dead if IA formed a government without Siumut.

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