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Air Greenland will reinstate flights from Nuuk, Greenland (shown here) to Iqaluit, Canada this summer. Photo: Eilís Quinn, Radio Canada International.
Flights twice-weekly to and from Nuuk to be offered this summer

Air Greenland will reinstate its Iqaluit to Nuuk route for an 11-week period starting June 18.

Christian Keldsen, chief commercial officer of Air Greenland, said it will be a seasonal route to start, running until Sept. 3, but if it proves feasible the company is interested in expanding the schedule.

"We've had a look at a lot of different places in Canada to set up this operation and we found that with our current fleet and the cultural bond between our countries, it made very good sense to go back into Iqaluit," he said.


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Cairn Energy says it is convinced it will find oil and gas in the Arctic waters off Greenland's western coast, even though it not found any commercial deposits to date.

The Scottish exploration company is planning to drill four exploratory wells this summer in Davis Strait and Baffin Bay, both off the west coast of Greenland, but it has already abandoned one of its wells after finding it was dry.

David Nisbet, Cairn Energy's head of group corporate affairs, said the company still plans to drill the three other wells this summer.

"We believe somebody will find hydrocarbons [in] offshore Greenland. We obviously hope it is in our drilling campaign," Nisbet told CBC News.


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Greenpeace to be fined when protesters disrupt drilling

Cairn Energy has won a court injunction to keep Greenpeace activists from disrupting its Arctic offshore drilling efforts.

Greenpeace activists board Cairn Energy's Leiv Eiriksson oil rig, in this photo posted on the group's website on June 4. (Steve Morgan/Greenpeace) Under the injunction, which was granted by an Amsterdam court on Thursday, Greenpeace International can be fined €50,000 for each day protesters interfere with Cairn Energy's drilling off the western coast of Greenland.

A total of 20 Greenpeace activists were arrested last week after scaling the 53,000-tonne Leiv Eiriksson rig, one of two vessels the Scottish energy company is using to explore for oil and gas of Greenland's coast this year.


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Photo: Gustaf Klarin, SR Science Department
Geological studies in Greenland indicate that there are large deposits of valuable minerals in the mountains, and plenty of oil and gas off the coasts. And with the milder climate, it appears to be easier to exploit the nearly untouched Greenland. Today's relatively poor Greenlanders just may be the future new oil sheiks of the Arctic. There is broad political support for oil exploration. Uranium mining however, is dividing the country.

Kalistat Lund is a helicopter pilot, Social Democrat politician and opponent to uranium mining in his home town of Narsaq in southern Greenland.


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A Canadian tugboat tows an iceberg away to avoid a possible collision with oil drilling platforms in the North Atlantic Ocean near the Grand Banks in 2003. (Gary C. Knapp/Associated Press)
Drilling to take place between Nunavut and Greenland

Greenland gave a small Scottish firm permission to drill for oil under the icy waters off its western coast Wednesday, one of the first times drills will be in use on the seafloor beneath the area they call "iceberg alley."

On Wednesday, Cairn Energy PLC was given formal approval by Greenland's cabinet to drill the first two of four planned drill sites along the Disko West portion of Davis Strait, the iceberg-filled stretch of water between Greenland and Nunavut.