The EU opened its first Arctic Workplace in Nuuk, the capital of Greenland, on Friday (15 March).
“This workplace is greater than bricks and mortar. That is the start of a brand new period of partnership,” stated EU Fee president Ursula von der Leyen, who had travelled to Greenland to win the island’s favour over different main powers additionally vying for its mineral wealth.
Whereas not technically part of the EU, the Danish territory is changing into more and more important to the bloc as world warming and melting ice reveal the huge mineral wealth trapped beneath.
The EU Fee believes Greenland has 25 of the 34 uncooked supplies it wants, together with lithium, niobium, and zirconium utilized in batteries, magnets, and metallic alloys.
In December, the EU and Greenland signed a strategic partnership on sustainable uncooked supplies worth chains.
This week’s go to, which included Mette Frederiksen, the Danish prime minister, was meant to deliver Greenland even nearer with two extra agreements, bucket a great deal of appeal and the promise of future earnings.
Appeal, revenue and democracy
One initiative prolonged an present fund geared toward enhancing native schooling and retraining employees, totalling €71m, whereas one other centered on a €22m funding deal in inexperienced power.
“Greenland is the house of vital minerals, and Europe wants what you could have,” stated Frederiksen, not beating across the bush. “So all of us hope for a more in-depth relationship on that as effectively — to the good thing about us each, in fact.”
However there are different events apart from Europe. Former US president Donald Trump supplied to purchase the island in 2019, which he described as a “massive actual property deal.”
China has additionally tried to attract the island into its sphere of affect by providing funding proposals for mines, roads, and airports. However regardless of the obvious enthusiasm from governments, solely two mines are working on the world’s largest island at present.
That is partly because of Greenland’s distant location — technically a part of the North American continent — which makes the price of transport and mining is prohibitively excessive. And native communities are involved that large-scale mining might disturb their lifestyle or lead to environmental hurt, which has made the subject politically controversial.
So von der Leyen and Frederiksen aimed to allay considerations and draw Greenland nearer by pledging to guard the surroundings and invoking a shared democratic tradition.
“From the very first second, it felt like residence, and I feel it’s as a result of we’re so like-minded,” stated von der Leyen, who had simply arrived in Greenland. “Our curiosity is to affix forces as democracies and like-minded companions.”
“For us, it is very important give the very best provide to our companions in Greenland, which is transparency and full respect for the surroundings,” she assured Greenland’s prime minister, Múte Bourup Egede, standing beside her.
“Others do the mining right here, then take the processing to their very own nation,” she stated, in an implicit dig at China.
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“We don’t need to associate simply to extract minerals; we need to add high-value actions and construct processing and refining right here,” she added.
Whereas aware to not offend his high-profile visitors, Egede made positive to maintain the door open for different potential events. “All people on the planet must spend money on the inexperienced transition,” he stated. “Final yr we had a near-record quantity of mining explorations. So clearly there’s curiosity.”
Autonomy
Greenland has been beneath Danish sovereignty since 1721 and has inched in the direction of extra autonomy in current many years. In 2009, the island gained a measure of self-rule, together with management of its mineral assets.
Denmark continues to be answerable for overseas coverage, defence, and safety. However that is slowly shifting.
In April 2023, a draft structure was unveiled. In a coverage doc printed in February, the island governing physique outlined its overseas, defence and commerce technique.
The Naalakkersuisut, the Island’s chief govt physique, desires nearer ties to the Arctic elements of North America and has proposed establishing a brand new political discussion board known as the Arctic North American Discussion board, the place Greenland would characterize itself.
The textual content acknowledges its neighbour, the US, because the “world’s main superpower”, signalling a delicate alignment with Western powers.
Nonetheless, Greenland additionally not too long ago opened its personal illustration in Beijing in an effort to reinforce relations with China and has been cautious to not overly incite Russia, mentioning the nation solely as soon as in its technique.
By “enhancing its collaboration” with different powers and “eliminating commerce limitations,” Greenland officers purpose to place Greenland as a secure area to forestall a navy escalation of their yard.
“Mainly, we need to keep away from an arms race within the Arctic,” stated Vivian Motzfeldt, Naalakkersuisut for Independence and International Affairs, in a press release. “We’ll, due to this fact, cooperate extra with our allies.”
“The start line for that and for manoeuvring extra safely within the Arctic is to contain the Arctic populations, to contain us,” she added.