Real Clear Politics / Real Clear World
 
October 25, 2013  
Greenland Opens Way for Mining Boom
By  _Jan  Olsen_ (http://www.realclearworld.com/authors/jan_olsen/) 


COPENHAGEN, Denmark (AP) -- Greenland's parliament has agreed to remove a  
25-year-old ban on uranium mining, paving the way for an industrial boom 
that  the Arctic island hopes will help it gain independence from former 
colonial  master Denmark. 
Greenland, a semi-autonomous part of Denmark, wants to step up its mining 
of  rare earths, valuable elements used in the production of smartphones, 
weapons  systems, and other modern technologies. But uranium is often found 
mixed into  rare earths, so the ban was blocking key mining activity. 
Experts estimate that a mine in southern Greenland could contain the 
largest  rare-earth metals deposit outside _China_ 
(http://realclearworld.com/topic/around_the_world/china/?utm_source=rcw&utm_medium=link&utm_campaign=rcwauto
link) 
,  which currently accounts for more than 90 percent of global production. 
An  Australian company has estimated it could extract up to 40,000 tons of 
rare  earth metals per year. 

 
In a 15-14 vote with two absentees, the parliament backed late Thursday the 
 center-left governing coalition's desire to remove the ban. The government 
also  gave a British company a license to extract iron. The company, London 
Mining, is  now seeking investments to develop a mine northeast of Nuuk, 
the capital, and is  expected to bring in foreign workers, possibly from 
China. 
Many Greenlanders want to use the island's mineral resources as a way to  
reduce dependency on a subsidy from Denmark which now accounts for about  
two-thirds of the island's economy. Denmark is open to allowing Greenland  
greater independence, but there is currently no way the island can support its  
costs without the subsidy. 
Denmark's foreign trade minister, Nick Haekkerup, sought to ease concerns  
that Greenland might sell the uranium it finds in the rare earths mining. He 
 said Friday that the country cannot decide that alone because Denmark 
still  handles its security and foreign policy. 
Jens-Erik Kirkegaard, Greenland's minister for natural resources, said 
after  Thursday's vote that several laws now need to be changed before exports 
of rare  earths can start "in a couple of years or more." The government 
wants to  introduce royalties on the mining industry and revise a law that 
would 
allow an  influx of foreign labor. 
Environmental activists lamented the parliament's narrow vote in favor of  
lifting the ban on uranium extraction. 
"It can have great consequences for the environment and the people of  
Greenland," said Greenpeace spokesman Jon Burgwald in Copenhagen , "So we  
suggest that specific maximum limits on how much radiation, wastewater  
discharge, etc. are decided."

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