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GREENLAND

Greenland ‘absorbs more methane than it emits’

Greenland absorbs more of the greenhouse gas methane than it emits, according to a new study from the University of Copenhagen released on Wednesday.

Greenland 'absorbs more methane than it emits'
Northern Greenland in October 2023. The vast Arctic island absorbs more of the greenhouse gas methane than it emits, according to a new study. Photo: Thomas Traasdahl/Ritzau Scanpix

“On average and since 2000, dry landscapes of the ice-free part of Greenland have consumed more than 65,000 tons of methane annually from the
atmosphere, while 9,000 tons of methane have been released annually from its wet areas,” the university said in a statement.

The findings, which were published in the journal Nature Communications Earth & Environment, are encouraging because methane, the second-biggest
contributor to global warming after CO2, is particularly harmful to the environment.

According to the United Nations, it is responsible for around 30 percent of the rise in average temperatures since the industrial revolution.

The Greenland phenomenon “is partly due to Greenland’s widespread dry landscapes, where methane from the atmosphere is consumed into the upper layers of soil,” said Bo Elberling, a geologist who led the study.

Elberling said it was also “partly because the ice-free parts of Greenland have only been without ice since the last ice age, meaning that they never stored much carbon, which could lead to large methane emissions, as can be measured elsewhere in the Arctic”.

The absorbtion of methane is possible because of a “unique group of microorganisms” that live in the upper layers of arctic soil.

“These microorganisms use methane that penetrates the soil from the atmosphere and convert it into carbon dioxide (CO2),” the university said.

It added that while CO2 was also a greenhouse gas, its effect is “a lot less strong than methane, making the conversion of methane to carbon dioxide good climate news”.

At the same time, the researchers concluded that Greenland would not “impact the total global amount of atmospheric methane or prove to be decisive
for Arctic methane budgets”.

“The uptake of methane in Greenland is simply too small compared to other known methane sources,” the statement said, noting places like Siberia.

Methane lasts 12 years in the atmosphere, compared with centuries for CO2, but it has a greenhouse effect 25 times more powerful than that of CO2.

In the Arctic, it is released into the atmosphere as a result of the permafrost thawing.

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GREENLAND

Greenland boycotts Nordic Council over ‘discrimination’

The Danish autonomous territory of Greenland said on Wednesday it was suspending participation in the Nordic Council cooperation forum due to the discrimination to which it says it is subjected.

Greenland boycotts Nordic Council over 'discrimination'

Greenland complained it had been excluded from an upcoming meeting on foreign and security policy to which only ministers from Denmark, Finland, Iceland, Norway and Sweden — as well as non-Council member Germany — had been invited.

None of the Nordic region’s autonomous territories — Greenland, the Faroe Islands and Aland — had received invites.

“I cannot continue to participate in events where there is discrimination between the participants,” Greenland’s Prime Minister Mute Egede wrote in an open letter sent late Tuesday to the current holder of the Nordic Council presidency, Sweden.

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He said he would reconsider Greenland’s suspension if the Nordic Council allowed it to “participate on equal terms with the other member states on all subjects — including foreign, security and defence policy subjects — in all Nordic Council forums.”

The decision comes amid strained relations between Copenhagen and Nuuk, the latter increasingly frustrated by Denmark’s control over Arctic issues.

The world’s largest island, located in the Arctic some 2,500 kilometres (1,550 miles) from Denmark, Greenland has its own flag, language, culture, institutions and prime minister. But it still relies heavily on a Danish grant, which makes up a quarter of its GDP and more than half of its public budget.

Defence, justice and foreign affairs are all decided by Copenhagen.

Last year, a Greenland commission presented a draft constitution to parliament, which the territory could use if it were to ever negotiate independence from Denmark.

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