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Arctic oil

July 7, 2010

Off-shore oil drilling might have a bad name in the United States, but it hasn't stopped a plan to probe for oil in the remote waters around Greenland. A local shaman says the plan is a double-edged sword.

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Landscape of skies and water with some mountains in the background
What lays beneath the surface?Image: AP

The Inuit shaman Angaangaq is known and beloved not only in his native Greenland but far beyond its shores. His opinions on climate change and its consequences on life in the Arctic are well respected, and he has appeared before the United Nations several times to give voice to the rights of Greenland's indigenous population.

Red skies relflected on the water's surface, peppered with ice
Greenland's melting ice allows ships to cut travel timeImage: AP

Although he doesn't welcome the drilling off his country's coast, he understands the logic behind it.

"The Eskimos want economic development just like Germany," he said. "What they have in Greenland is some of the biggest oils and gas on earth, so they want that wealth to live among them."

A ship belonging to Cairn Energy, an Edinburgh-based oil company, is already in Disko Bay to take two samples from the area on the border between Canada and Greenland. The company also hopes to receive authorities' permission to drill a second pair of wells.

Water depths for Cairn's wells are between 900 feet and 1,500 feet (275 meters to 457 meters); which are less than the 5,000 feet for BP's ruptured Macondo well in the Gulf of Mexico. Other oil giants, including ExxonMobil and Chevron, have exploration rights for fields near Cairn Energy's and are expected to pay close attention to the British company's test results.

Local independence

Not far from the UNESCO natural heritage site of Ilulissat Icefjord, reserves of up to 50 million tons of oil are believed to be beneath the sea. For the local population, drilling represents both the possibility of an improved quality of life and economic independence from its financial keeper, Denmark.

But given the scale of the oil catastrophe in the Gulf of Mexico, Greenland does not want to drill at any cost. After consultation with Norway and the decision to adopt the strictest safety regulations and precautions, authorities in Greenland have given the project the green light. But even rigorous precautions cannot provide any absolute guarantees that nothing will go wrong.

Landscape of ice mountains and water
The Ilulissat Icefjord is a UNESCO World Heritage SiteImage: AP

"There is a chance that it will work and a chance that it will not work, but no matter how much control you have, bad things can happen," Angaangaq said.

How well prepared they are, nobody really knows, but should they stop drilling or keep being dependent on the money from Denmark. Can the EU afford to support Denmark?" he added. "I don't think the EU can afford it, I don't think the Danish people can afford it. So what do we do? It's a dilemma."

Disaster in the making?

Scientists have warned that if there is any kind of disaster in the water and ice around Greenland, the consequences would be worse than those which continually to wash ashore from the Deepwater Horizon well in the Gulf of Mexico.

A dead, oil-coated fish floats on the water
The cost of mining gone wrongImage: AP

Even ship travel poses a threat for the Arctic's sensitive ecosystem. While just a few years ago the layer of ice on the north-east passage was still thick enough to prevent the passage of ships, tankers now frequently make the journey.

When the ice melts in the summer, it frees up the fastest sea route to Asia, saving shipping companies millions. Angaangaq said the number of vessels passing though increases daily and that most of them are insufficiently equipped for Arctic conditions.

"If they hit an iceberg we will repeat the stupidity of the Titanic and many people will be lost."

Reporter: Zeljka Telisman (tkw)

Editor: Sean Sinico