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Independent news, analysis and commentary on the world's most exciting economy Since 1990 Search CER English CER Chinese | 中文版 Mice Now MBA News Store Events Business The House View Economics & Policy Columns & Interviews Markets & Finance Archive PDF Login SSE Comp 2,016.33 -2.02% SZSE Comp 7,192.55 -1.86% CSI 300 2,117.81 -2.33% Hang Seng 22,295.77 -1.61% USD-CNY 6.1443 0.294% Data Courtesy China in the Arctic Greenland, a frontier market unlike any other for China Thursday, February 27, 2014 Picture Greenland through the eyes of a Chinese mineral baron or the boss of a state-owned construction giant. The quasi nation, which is slowly becoming independent from Denmark, possesses some of the largest reserves of gold, iron, copper and zinc in the world. After China, Greenland has the biggest deposits of rare earths – materials essential to tech devices such as smartphones. Its uranium resources, should they be mined, could put the arctic country among the top exporters of the elements. All of this is becoming available in a space of land the size of Germany, as climate change melts the ice and opens up access. The country also has oil, an estimated 32 billion barrels worth, which could put it among major producing nations such as Nigeria and Kazakhstan, although the reserves have not been commercially proven yet. More than half of the island has yet to be explored. What Greenland doesn't have is roads, or many ports – or really any of the infrastructure or human resources needed to get at this buried treasure. Chinese mining outfits, construction companies and state banks no doubt envisage Chinese miners hauling their spoils down Chinese-leveled and -financed roads to a port that China built and paid for specifically to access the minerals. “With a population of 56,000, our biggest challenge is that we have no infrastructure,” Kai Holst Andersen, Greenland's deputy foreign minister, said at an address last week at Shanghai's Polar Research Institute. “Can you imagine, on the world's largest island, there is no road between two cities. There are no ports in the places where the mines need to be. There are no people in many of the places where mines need to be constructed.” A hugely significant new bill means that's about to change, and Greenland seems highly welcoming of China's hand in its natural resources. This year, Greenland will open its doors to foreign labor and could, in a single gulp, boost its total population by more than 5% with foreign workers, most of whom would be Chinese. Last fall, Greenland's parliament, the Inatsisartut, passed the Large-Scale Projects Act, a controversial measure that gives foreign workers stronger rights. The act isn't final yet. The Share: DAILY NEWSBRIEFS Huayi Brothers plans to invest up to $150m in Studio 8 Monday, March 10, 2014 China CPI climbs at slowest pace in 13 months Monday, March 10, 2014 Sharp drop in February China exports Monday, March 10, 2014 Chaori Solar defaults on bond interest payments Monday, March 10, 2014 Search continued for Malaysia Airlines wreckage Monday, March 10, 2014 more LATEST ARTICLES China can’t stage-manage the global economy Mar 7 2014 - 3:19pm Market roundup: March 7 How a default is stealing the show from Beijing's big event Mar 6 2014 - 1:51pm Corporate bonds China's provinces call in the toxic-asset managers Mar 5 2014 - 4:02pm Local debt crisis How far will Beijing walk after all the talk on SOE reform? Mar 4 2014 - 2:33pm Side 1 af 3 Greenland, a frontier market unlike any other for China | China Economic Review 10-03-2014 http://www.chinaeconomicreview.com/china-in-the-arctic-greenland-iron-mining

Greenland a frontier market unlike any other for China a frontier... · SSE Comp 2,016.33 -2.02% SZSE Comp 7,192.55 -1.86% CSI 300 2,117.81 -2.33% Hang Seng 22,295.77 -1.61% USD-CNY

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Page 1: Greenland a frontier market unlike any other for China a frontier... · SSE Comp 2,016.33 -2.02% SZSE Comp 7,192.55 -1.86% CSI 300 2,117.81 -2.33% Hang Seng 22,295.77 -1.61% USD-CNY

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SSE Comp 2,016.33 -2.02% SZSE Comp 7,192.55 -1.86% CSI 300 2,117.81 -2.33% Hang Seng 22,295.77 -1.61% USD-CNY 6.1443 0.294% Data Courtesy

China in the Arctic

Greenland, a frontier market unlike any other for

ChinaThursday, February 27, 2014

Picture Greenland through the eyes of a Chinese mineral baron or the boss of a state-owned

construction giant.

The quasi nation, which is slowly becoming independent from Denmark, possesses some of

the largest reserves of gold, iron, copper and zinc in the world. After China, Greenland has the

biggest deposits of rare earths – materials essential to tech devices such as smartphones. Its

uranium resources, should they be mined, could put the arctic country among the top exporters

of the elements.

All of this is becoming available in a space of land the size of Germany, as climate change

melts the ice and opens up access. The country also has oil, an estimated 32 billion barrels

worth, which could put it among major producing nations such as Nigeria and Kazakhstan,

although the reserves have not been commercially proven yet. More than half of the island has

yet to be explored.

What Greenland doesn't have is roads, or many ports – or really any of the infrastructure or

human resources needed to get at this buried treasure. Chinese mining outfits, construction

companies and state banks no doubt envisage Chinese miners hauling their spoils down

Chinese-leveled and -financed roads to a port that China built and paid for specifically to

access the minerals.

“With a population of 56,000, our biggest challenge is that we have no infrastructure,” Kai Holst

Andersen, Greenland's deputy foreign minister, said at an address last week at Shanghai's

Polar Research Institute. “Can you imagine, on the world's largest island, there is no road

between two cities. There are no ports in the places where the mines need to be. There are no

people in many of the places where mines need to be constructed.”

A hugely significant new bill means that's about to change, and Greenland seems highly

welcoming of China's hand in its natural resources.

This year, Greenland will open its doors to foreign labor and could, in a single gulp, boost its

total population by more than 5% with foreign workers, most of whom would be Chinese. Last

fall, Greenland's parliament, the Inatsisartut, passed the Large-Scale Projects Act, a

controversial measure that gives foreign workers stronger rights. The act isn't final yet. The

Share:

DAILY NEWSBRIEFS

Huayi Brothers plans to invest up to $150m

in Studio 8 Monday, March 10, 2014

China CPI climbs at slowest pace in 13

months Monday, March 10, 2014

Sharp drop in February China exports

Monday, March 10, 2014

Chaori Solar defaults on bond interest

payments Monday, March 10, 2014

Search continued for Malaysia Airlines

wreckage Monday, March 10, 2014

more

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economy

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Beijing's big event

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Corporate bonds

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managers

Mar 5 2014 - 4:02pm

Local debt crisis

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SOE reform?

Mar 4 2014 - 2:33pm

Side 1 af 3Greenland, a frontier market unlike any other for China | China Economic Review

10-03-2014http://www.chinaeconomicreview.com/china-in-the-arctic-greenland-iron-mining

Page 2: Greenland a frontier market unlike any other for China a frontier... · SSE Comp 2,016.33 -2.02% SZSE Comp 7,192.55 -1.86% CSI 300 2,117.81 -2.33% Hang Seng 22,295.77 -1.61% USD-CNY

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Danish parliament, which still controls Greenland's immigration policy, must first approve it, “but

that's a minor part of it,” to put it in Andersen's words.

Once the bill is enacted, some 3,000 Chinese workers from Sichuan Xinye Mining Investment

Company could be flown over to operate a major iron-ore mine, known as the Isua project,

located about 150 kilometers from the capital Nuuk. At the same parliamentary session that

passed the large projects act, the Greenlandic government awarded London Mining a 30-year

license to build and operate the mine. As the technical advisor, London Mining plans to hire

Sichuan Xinye to do the digging.

There's a caveat though – one that the Chinese mining barons might want to pay attention to.

Greenland may not have roads or the people it needs to open huge mining pits. But the country

does have laws, and strict ones at that. As part of the Kingdom of Denmark for more than three

centuries, the country has developed strong institutions and a mature legal system.

“We are, in mining terms, a frontier country. But we are not a frontier country like frontier

countries in Africa or South America. We are something very different – perhaps unique,”

Andersen said. “We have evolved over 300 years a solid legal framework, a well-educated

population, rules, democratic institutions and a strong society.”

When it comes to environmental regulation, Andersen claims that the country has some of the

tightest regulations in the world. Greenlanders live much as their ancestors did: Highly

dependent on local resources such as fish. Yet, with climatic zones moving north by about two

kilometers per year, the country's northernmost zone will disappear within 10 years, delivering

a major blow to indigenous lifestyles. Tight environmental laws aim to protect what they can of

the people's way of life.

The Large-Scale Projects Act, while allowing foreign workers to come into the country, is also

designed to protect Greenland from bad practices and step up the level of monitoring done on

projects during the construction phase.

Tough mining regulations will put Chinese companies out of their element. Chinese state-run

firms are active in frontier and emerging markets across the globe but their success often relies

on corrupt governments and a lack of regulations.

In countries such as Cambodia, where several state-owned Chinese firms are building

everything from hydropower dams and roads to bridges and ports, civil society groups have

protested the negative effects the projects have had on local people and the environment.

These often-poor governments rebuke such complaints, saying that without China's cheap

labor, technical skills and willingness to finance the projects on long-term, low-interest loans,

development would not be possible.

At present, only one exploration project in Greenland has been awarded to China. A Chinese

company is exploring copper resources on the island's east coast. Since 2002, when

Greenland opened bidding on oil projects, China has participated but not won.

But the message from the Greenlandic government seems clear: China's hunger for resources

will compliment well a nation looking for cheap roads and ports. As Andersen put it, “We

particularly welcome investments from China because we can see that you can do a lot of what

we need.”

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Greenland, a frontier market unlike any other

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Feb 27 2014 - 1:37pm

China in the Arctic

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Side 2 af 3Greenland, a frontier market unlike any other for China | China Economic Review

10-03-2014http://www.chinaeconomicreview.com/china-in-the-arctic-greenland-iron-mining

Page 3: Greenland a frontier market unlike any other for China a frontier... · SSE Comp 2,016.33 -2.02% SZSE Comp 7,192.55 -1.86% CSI 300 2,117.81 -2.33% Hang Seng 22,295.77 -1.61% USD-CNY

Side 3 af 3Greenland, a frontier market unlike any other for China | China Economic Review

10-03-2014http://www.chinaeconomicreview.com/china-in-the-arctic-greenland-iron-mining