LifestyleGreenland opens doors to tourists: is paradise at risk?

Greenland opens doors to tourists: is paradise at risk?

Greenland is working diligently to attract tourists from various parts of the world. An international airport has already opened in the capital, allowing direct flights from Europe and North America.

The first plane that landed in Nuuk was an Air Greenlan aircraft.
The first plane that landed in Nuuk was an Air Greenlan aircraft.
Images source: © Getty Images | SeanGallup
ed. NGU

29 November 2024 07:41

The investment in the city of Nuuk is aimed at developing mass tourism in this location. However, this raises significant concerns about the impact on the unique natural environment of the world's largest island.

Is Greenland the new hit for tourists?

A new runway, measuring about 2.3 kilometres, at the airport in Greenland's capital welcomed the first Air Greenland plane from Copenhagen. Officials, including the Danish Foreign Minister Lars Løkke Rasmussen, were on board. The terminal, whose construction cost as much as 800 million dollars, can handle 800 passengers per hour.

Later this year, connections from two other Danish cities, as well as from Canada and the USA, are planned to be launched. Jens Lauridsen, CEO of Greenland Airports, expressed hope that the airport will contribute to an increase in the number of tourists and the development of other sectors of the economy, positioning Greenland as an attractive travel destination.

Greenland attracts tourists primarily with its unspoilt and unique natural environment on a global scale. In 2023, the island was visited by over 130,000 people, which is an increase of 46% compared to 2019, before the COVID-19 pandemic.

Ambitious plans

Additional airports in the cities of Ilulissat and Qaqortoq will be built by 2026. The Greenland government aims for tourism to account for 40% of export value by 2035, which currently relies mainly on fishing. To achieve this goal, the number of tourists would need to double.

Regulations have been introduced to prevent earnings from being taken abroad by international networks, requiring that 65% of the shareholdings in companies belong to local entrepreneurs.

A larger airport is also to be built in Ilulissat.
A larger airport is also to be built in Ilulissat.© Adobe Stock | Vadim Nefedov

However, experts express concerns about whether the development of mass tourism could harm Greenland's nature, similar to what happened in Iceland. The increase in tourists led to infrastructure expansion at the expense of the environment. The media emphasise that Greenland, as an autonomous territory dependent on Denmark, is becoming increasingly accessible due to climate change and glacier melting.

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