A major storm is howling outside the building. The few people on the street are almost carried away by the wind. I am in Qaqortoq, in southern Greenland,— one day late due to the unstable weather. And this is how it is in Greenland.
Even though the incredible Arctic
nature is fragile and very vulnerable due to climate change, it is at
the same time harsh and unrelenting to the people living here. If the
weather doesn’t allow hunting or fishing, there is nothing to do but
wait.
I came to Qaqortoq to meet with people who are experiencing climate
change on a daily basis. The weather is becoming unpredictable, even for
the people who have spent their entire lives here. But climate change
is not the only thing changing Greenland; oil companies have their eyes
set on the Arctic waters, which are becoming more and more accessible as
the sea ice retreats. Scottish company Cairn Energy
has drilled off the coast of Greenland for the last two years, and has
in the process discharged vast amounts of damaging chemicals into the
fragile Arctic waters.
I’m here to meet with the young generation —the people who have the
difficult task of charting the path forward for Greenland. I’ve met with
the students at the two local colleges in town — colleges in which
Greenland youth from all over the country come to study. During the
coming weeks, I will travel the west coast of this beautiful country and
visit all eight upper schools, including the university in Nuuk. This
will hopefully result in interesting (if sometimes heated) debates
around the oil drillings, and the challenges and risks they bring.
Arctic drilling is unprecedentedly risky: icebergs are regularly
floating on a collision course with the dirty oil rigs, and the effects
of a spill are unimaginable. If a blow-out like the one we all remember
from the Gulf of Mexico were to happen in Arctic waters, the wildlife
here — already under pressure from climate change — will suffer
immensely and the people here, who for so many years have lived in
harmony with their surroundings, will no longer be able to hunt or fish
and sustain themselves in a traditional way. That would be cataclysmic
for these communities, and the risk is simply unacceptable.
So far my experience with the Greenlandic youth has been very
positive. They are critical and interested, and they clearly have a mind
of their own about oil drillings, Greenpeace and our engagement in
Greenland. I am looking forward to meeting more students in the days to
come and to speaking with them about the future of their beautiful and
unique home. They are the ones who will make the decisions about their
future. But they are not the only who cares about this beautiful place,
where the nature might seem harsh, but at the same time is so fragile,
and deserves our protection.
No comments:
Post a Comment