Uummannaq on Greenland’s vast and vastly unexplored coast.
Greenland has,however,become very keen to attract tourists for the health of its economy. Currently,it sees relatively few tourists,while visitor numbers to Iceland,another Arctic destination with similar appeal,have increased rapidly.
Infrastructure has been a major sticking point. Greenland,which is an autonomous region of Denmark,has a population of just under 57,000 sprinkled across its 2.16 million square kilometres,with many settlements only connected by water transport.
One of Arctic Umiaq’s coastal ferries among icebergs in Greenland’s Ilulissat Icefjord.
And even water transport can come a cropper – you only need to look to the experience of the Australians onboard the Ocean Explorer which ran aground in remote Greenland waters in September to realise what a wild and untamed place it is.
That is,of course,the attraction but now that Greenland is investing big in connections,many more will have an easier passage to follow their wanderlust to its shores. New airports are going up in the capital,Nuuk on the south-west coast (in addition to an existing airport),Ilulissat,in western Greenland,and Qaqortoq,in southern Greenland,with openings scheduled in 2024 and 2025.
The purpose is primarily to connect the Greenlanders to each other and the world,but also the rest of the world to Greenland.
Another exciting development is a new collaboration between Arctic Umiaq Line and Hurtigruten Norway.
A whale diving in Ilulissat,Greenland.