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US and European mining companies need to hurry up and invest in Greenland otherwise it will have to look elsewhere for help exploiting its minerals, including from China, a minister for the vast Arctic territory has warned.
โWe want to develop our business sector and diversify it, and that requires investments from outside,โโ Naaja Nathanielsen, Greenlandโs minister for business and mineral resources, told the Financial Times.
When asked about turning to China, she replied: โโWe do want to partner up with European and American partners. But if they donโt show up I think we need to look elsewhere.โ
The comments demonstrate Greenlandโs desire to get western help to expand its economy in mining and tourism, with United Airlines due to start flying from New York to the capital Nuuk from next month.
Greenland is home to large but fairly inaccessible deposits of minerals including gold and copper, and is located in a geopolitically crucial area in the Arctic.
Nathanielsen said a current memorandum of understanding on mineral development with the US โ signed during Donald Trumpโs first presidency โ was coming to an end and that Greenland tried unsuccessfully during the Biden administration to see if Washington wanted to renew it.
Trump has repeatedly insisted that the US will take over Greenland, a semi-autonomous territory of Denmark, potentially by force.
โWe sort of hoped that the Trump administration would be more willing to engage in dialogue with Greenland about the mineral sector development. We got a bit more than we asked for, because we have no wish to be American,โ she added.
Nathanielsen told the FT that she found Trumpโs threats to take control of Greenland โdisrespectful and distastefulโ. Her comments underscore the increasing anger felt by Greenlanders at Trumpโs aggressive approach to the island of 57,000 people.
She said that despite Trumpโs rhetoric, there was little interest from China in mining deals โ right now there are only two Chinese mining companies in Greenland, but both are minority shareholders in inactive projects. She speculated that Chinese investors might be holding back because they donโt want โto provoke anythingโ.
Her comments come as the country hailed the awarding of its first licence under a new mining code to a Danish-French group to extract anorthosite, a mineral used in the fibreglass industry.
The โฌ150mn mining project in Western Greenland aims to start construction as soon as next year, according to Claus Stoltenborg, chief executive of Greenland Anorthosite Mining.
The companyโs backers include a Greenlandic state pension fund, Danish bank Arbejdernes Landsbank, and Jean Boulle, a French mining group.
Greenland has only two operating mines, producing gold and anorthosite, while production has not started at a further two mines that have received a mining licence.
Nathanielsen said the new four-party coalition government in Nuuk was โโfirst and foremost committed to creating development for Greenland and Greenlandersโ and would prefer to work with โallies and like-minded partnersโ.
But she added that Greenland was โhaving a difficult time finding our footingโ in the changing nature of the western alliance.
โWe are trying to figure out, what does the new world order look like? In those terms, Chinese investment is of course problematic, but so, to some extent, is American,โ she said. โBecause what are the purpose of [the US investments]?โ
The EU is a โgood fitโ for Greenland as it had few of the minerals it needs itself, Nathanielsen added, as well as being aligned on environmental metrics.


