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Global
warming could
help Greenland to independence
Roger
Boyes 2008 05 07
A new national anthem may soon be needed. Greenland has taken its first
tentative steps towards becoming an independent state.
Anders Fogh Rasmussen, the
Danish Prime Minister, travelled to
Greenland – which has been part of Denmark since 1721 – to present a
report that sets out the road to full sovereignty. The plan, which has
been drawn up by a committee of politicians from Denmark and Greenland,
envisages the phasing out of subsidies from Copenhagen as the huge
island makes increasing use of its rich mineral and oil resources under
a thick layer of ice.
“This is a platform that really can launch us
into independence,” Lars-Emil Johansen, a Greenland politician who
helped to draft the plan, said. Greenland already boasts some striking
statistics: its territory – 85 per cent of which is iced over – is six
times larger than Germany, although it has a population about as large
as that of Folkestone. Nuuk, the capital, has 15,000 inhabitants.
The road to independence will be a long one and no one is writing
the
national anthem just yet, but one thing is already clear: when
Greenland makes the final break it will rank as one of the most
politically incorrect states in the international community.
Whalemeat figures large in its traditional cooking and its hunters
enthusiastically track down some of the cud-dliest animals on the
planet, including polar bears, seals and walruses. Even the seats of
the lounge at Nuuk airport are covered in seal skin. As for global
warming, Greenlanders cannot get enough of it. The melting of the
icebergs may, as some climate scientists predict, ultimately end up by
flooding American cities, but it has given political bargaining muscle
to the 57,000 inhabitants of the world’s largest island. “Climate
change will be very beneficial to society there,” Jesper Madsen, of the
DMU environmental research institute in Roskilde, in mainland Denmark,
said. “It will improve fishing and above all make it easier to drill
for oil and gas. The US geological survey calculates that the greatest
unused oil reserves on Earth are in the Greenland waters – and they are
in the east, where the ice is melting fastest.”
Greenland was given home rule by the Danes in 1979 but the island’s
economy is still dependent on subsidies. Almost everything, from beer
to lavatory paper, has to be imported from Denmark. It is subsidised to
the tune of €400 million (£315 million) a year. Under the terms of the
plan the country would eventually keep all the revenue from mineral and
oil exploitation. To begin with the islanders will be allowed the first
€10 million earned each year from the country’s resources. When it
starts to earn more than that – if and when multinational energy
companies invest – the Danish subsidies will be capped. By the time
Greenland earns €800 million a year, the money from Denmark will stop.
There would then be no obstacle to independence.
The plan has yet to be approved by the Danish parliament and by the
Greenlanders, but there is no significant resistance within Denmark,
even though the country would be losing 98 per cent of its territory.
The only party to oppose the move is the far-right Danish People’s
Party (DF). “This would be one of the biggest political mistakes in
Danish history,” Søren Espersen, who was the DF representative on the
commission, said. He argued that because Denmark has propped up
Greenland for so many decades it should not abandon the place just at
the moment when it might produce some useful revenue. But many Danes
see Greenland as a millstone. It has big social problems: the poverty
of fishing families whose waters have been taken over by foreign
fleets, a high suicide rate and high levels of HIV and Aids. The
calculation is that, even as an independent state, Greenland will need
development aid from Denmark – and in return will have to grant
Copenhagen some share in whatever energy bonanza emerges when the ice
is thinner.
Greenland broke ranks with Denmark and left the European Community, as
it then was, in 1985 and has shown no interest in rejoining. Whether
Greenlanders – 88 per cent of whom are Inuit or mixed Danish-Inuit –
drift politically closer to America than to Europe after independence
is unclear. At present Denmark has control over Greenland’s foreign and
defence policies even though Greenland is outside the EU. The US has a
radar station in Thule and may want to expand this base to incorporate
it into its missile defence system.
It was the Viking Erik the Red – whose family later went went on to set
up a Christian community in America – who gave the island its name. He
had been exiled from Iceland after committing multiple murders. No
doubt Erik – along with other great Inuit inventions such as the kayak
and anorak – will figure in the national anthem when it comes to be
written.
Greenland
Greenland
(Kalaallisut: Kalaallit Nunaat, meaning "Land of the
Greenlanders"; Danish: Grønland) is a self-governing Danish province
located between the Arctic and Atlantic Oceans, east of the Canadian
Arctic Archipelago.
Though physiographically and ethnically an Arctic
island nation associated with the continent of North America,
politically and historically Greenland is closely tied to Europe,
specifically Iceland, Norway, and Denmark.
In 1978, Denmark granted
home rule to Greenland, making it an equal member of the Rigsfællesskab.
Greenland is the world's
largest island by area
(Australia and Antarctica are considered continents rather than
islands).
Greenland's Head of State is currently Margrethe II. The Queen's
government in Denmark appoints a Rigsombudsmand (High commissioner)
representing the Danish government and monarchy. Greenland has an
elected parliament of thirty-one members. The head of government is the
Prime Minister, who is usually the leader of the majority party in
Parliament. The current Prime Minister is Hans Enoksen. In 1985
Greenland left the European Community (EC), unlike Denmark which
remains a member. The EC later became the EU (European Union) when it
was renamed and expanded in scope in 1992. Greenland retains some ties
with the EU via Denmark.
In prehistoric times, Greenland was home to a number of Paleo-Eskimo
cultures. From AD 984 it was colonized by Norse settlers in two
settlements on the west coast on the fjords near the very southwestern
tip of the island. They thrived for a few centuries, but after nearly
500 years of habitation, disappeared sometime in the 15th century.
Data from ice cores indicate that from AD 800 to 1300 the regions
around the fjords of southern Greenland experienced a relatively mild
climate similar to today. Trees and herbaceous plants grew there, and
the climate initially allowed farming of livestock as in Norway. These
remote communities thrived on farming, hunting and trade with Norway.
When the Norwegian kings converted their domains to Christianity, a
bishop was installed in Greenland, subordinate to the archdiocese of
Nidaros. The settlements seem to have coexisted relatively peacefully
with the Inuit, who had migrated south from the Arctic islands of North
America around 1200. In 1261, Greenland became part of the Kingdom of
Norway.
Around the 14th and 15th centuries, the Scandinavian settlements
vanished, likely due to famine and increasing conflicts with the Inuit.
The condition of human bones from this period indicates the Norse
population was malnourished. Main reasons appeared to have been soil
erosion due to destruction of the natural vegetation for farming, turf,
and wood by the Norse, a decline in temperatures during the Little Ice
Age, and armed conflicts with the Inuit. It has been suggested that
cultural practices, such as rejecting fish as a source of food and
reliance solely on livestock ill-adapted to Greenland's climate, caused
by the mini-ice age, which resulted in recurring famines, with
environmental degradation led to the abandonment of the colony.
Research (written before Diamond's book) has made it clear however that
fish were a major source of food for the Norse Greenlanders from the
early 1300s on.
Denmark-Norway reasserted its latent claim to the colony in 1721. But
ties with Norway were severed by the Treaty of Kiel of 1814, ceding
Norway to the king of Sweden while Denmark retained all of her common
overseas possessions: the Faroe Islands, Iceland and Greenland, as well
as Denmark-Norway's small territories in India (Tranquebar), West
Africa (Danish Gold Coast), and the West Indies (Danish Virgin Islands).
Norway occupied and claimed parts of (then uninhabited) East Greenland
also called Erik the Red's Land in July 1931, claiming that it
constituted Terra nullius. Norway and Denmark agreed to settle the
matter at the Permanent Court of International Justice in 1933, where
Norway lost.
During World War II, Greenland's connection to Denmark was severed on
April 9, 1940 when Denmark was occupied by Germany. Greenland was able
to buy goods from the United States and Canada, by selling cryolite
from the mine in Ivigtût. During the war the system of government
changed. Governor Eske Brun ruled the island via a 1925 law that
allowed governors to take control under extreme circumstances. The
other governor, Aksel Svane, was transferred to the US to lead the
commission to supply Greenland. The Sirius Patrol, guarding the
northeastern shores of Greenland using dog sleds, detected and
destroyed several German weather stations, giving Denmark a better
position in the postwar turmoil.
Greenland had been a protected and very isolated society until 1940.
The Danish government, which governed its colony Greenland, had been
convinced that the society would face exploitation from the outside
world or even extinction if the country was opened up. But during World
War II, Greenland developed a sense of self-reliance through its
self-government and independent communication with the outside world.
However, a commission in 1946 (with the highest Greenlandic council
Landsrådet as participant) recommended patience and no radical
reformation of the system. Two years later the first step towards
changing the governing was initiated when a grand commission was
founded. In 1950 the report (G-50) was presented. Greenland was to be a
modern welfare society with Denmark as the sponsor and example. In
1953, Greenland was made an equal part of the Danish Kingdom. Home rule
was granted in 1979.
Greenland today is critically dependent on fishing and fish exports;
the shrimp fishing industry is by far the largest income earner.
Despite resumption of several interesting hydrocarbon and mineral
exploration activities, it will take several years before production
can materialize. The state oil company NUNAOIL was created in order to
help develop the hydrocarbon industry in Greenland. Tourism is the only
sector offering any near-term potential and even this is limited due to
a short season and high costs. The public sector, including publicly
owned enterprises and the municipalities, plays the dominant role in
Greenland's economy. About half the government revenues come from
grants from the Danish Government, an important supplement to the gross
domestic product (GDP). Gross domestic product per capita is equivalent
to that of the weaker economies of Europe.
Greenland suffered economic contraction in the early 1990s, but since
1993 the economy has improved. The Greenland Home Rule Government
(GHRG) has pursued a tight fiscal policy since the late 1980s which has
helped create surpluses in the public budget and low inflation. Since
1990, Greenland has registered a foreign trade deficit following the
closure of the last remaining lead and zinc mine that year. |
See also
Latest Scientific
Studies Refute Fears of Greenland Melt
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