Part of the Master Plan? Chinese Investment in Rare Earth Mining in Greenland

Western governments frequently perceive Chinese investors in natural resources as driven by strategic state interests to a much larger extent than investors from Western countries, who supposedly operate according to market economic norms without states pulling them in particular directions. This ar...

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Main Author: Zeuthen, Jesper Willaing
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: 2017
Subjects:
Online Access:https://vbn.aau.dk/da/publications/2e358b49-12c8-4b41-9534-9623c065f81d
https://www.arcticyearbook.com/images/Articles_2017/scholarly-articles/17_Part_of_the_Master_Plan.pdf
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spelling ftalborgunivpubl:oai:pure.atira.dk:publications/2e358b49-12c8-4b41-9534-9623c065f81d 2023-05-15T14:23:10+02:00 Part of the Master Plan? Chinese Investment in Rare Earth Mining in Greenland Zeuthen, Jesper Willaing 2017-10-13 https://vbn.aau.dk/da/publications/2e358b49-12c8-4b41-9534-9623c065f81d https://www.arcticyearbook.com/images/Articles_2017/scholarly-articles/17_Part_of_the_Master_Plan.pdf eng eng info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess Zeuthen , J W 2017 , ' Part of the Master Plan? Chinese Investment in Rare Earth Mining in Greenland ' , Arctic Yearbook , vol. 2017 . < https://www.arcticyearbook.com/images/Articles_2017/scholarly-articles/17_Part_of_the_Master_Plan.pdf > article 2017 ftalborgunivpubl 2023-01-12T22:39:13Z Western governments frequently perceive Chinese investors in natural resources as driven by strategic state interests to a much larger extent than investors from Western countries, who supposedly operate according to market economic norms without states pulling them in particular directions. This article studies a potential Chinese investment in mining minerals which are strategically important to China in a region that is widely argued to be of strategic importance to China. By making a content analysis of Chinese language articles on mining, and through interviews with some of those involved in organizing Chinese investment in the rare earth elements (REE) and uranium mining project at Kvanefjeld near Narsaq, Southern Greenland, the article studies how country specific Chinese priorities and a sector specific political economy affect a Chinese enterprise investing in the Kvanefjeld project. The article seeks to 1) add substance to the many speculations on Chinese intentions in Greenland that have dominated discussion in the Danish media, and to some extent also politics and academia, and to 2) add understanding to how state and market interact in Chinese REE mining projects overseas. The article shows that while much Chinese state attention is clearly directed towards the supposedly strategically important investments in Greenland, and state incentives play a large role, the amount of coordination and strategic focus is very limited. Western governments frequently perceive Chinese investors in natural resources as driven by strategic state interests to a much larger extent than investors from Western countries, who supposedly operate according to market economic norms without states pulling them in particular directions. This article studies a potential Chinese investment in mining minerals which are strategically important to China in a region that is widely argued to be of strategic importance to China. By making a content analysis of Chinese language articles on mining, and through interviews with some of ... Article in Journal/Newspaper Arctic Greenland Narsaq Aalborg University's Research Portal Greenland
institution Open Polar
collection Aalborg University's Research Portal
op_collection_id ftalborgunivpubl
language English
description Western governments frequently perceive Chinese investors in natural resources as driven by strategic state interests to a much larger extent than investors from Western countries, who supposedly operate according to market economic norms without states pulling them in particular directions. This article studies a potential Chinese investment in mining minerals which are strategically important to China in a region that is widely argued to be of strategic importance to China. By making a content analysis of Chinese language articles on mining, and through interviews with some of those involved in organizing Chinese investment in the rare earth elements (REE) and uranium mining project at Kvanefjeld near Narsaq, Southern Greenland, the article studies how country specific Chinese priorities and a sector specific political economy affect a Chinese enterprise investing in the Kvanefjeld project. The article seeks to 1) add substance to the many speculations on Chinese intentions in Greenland that have dominated discussion in the Danish media, and to some extent also politics and academia, and to 2) add understanding to how state and market interact in Chinese REE mining projects overseas. The article shows that while much Chinese state attention is clearly directed towards the supposedly strategically important investments in Greenland, and state incentives play a large role, the amount of coordination and strategic focus is very limited. Western governments frequently perceive Chinese investors in natural resources as driven by strategic state interests to a much larger extent than investors from Western countries, who supposedly operate according to market economic norms without states pulling them in particular directions. This article studies a potential Chinese investment in mining minerals which are strategically important to China in a region that is widely argued to be of strategic importance to China. By making a content analysis of Chinese language articles on mining, and through interviews with some of ...
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Zeuthen, Jesper Willaing
spellingShingle Zeuthen, Jesper Willaing
Part of the Master Plan? Chinese Investment in Rare Earth Mining in Greenland
author_facet Zeuthen, Jesper Willaing
author_sort Zeuthen, Jesper Willaing
title Part of the Master Plan? Chinese Investment in Rare Earth Mining in Greenland
title_short Part of the Master Plan? Chinese Investment in Rare Earth Mining in Greenland
title_full Part of the Master Plan? Chinese Investment in Rare Earth Mining in Greenland
title_fullStr Part of the Master Plan? Chinese Investment in Rare Earth Mining in Greenland
title_full_unstemmed Part of the Master Plan? Chinese Investment in Rare Earth Mining in Greenland
title_sort part of the master plan? chinese investment in rare earth mining in greenland
publishDate 2017
url https://vbn.aau.dk/da/publications/2e358b49-12c8-4b41-9534-9623c065f81d
https://www.arcticyearbook.com/images/Articles_2017/scholarly-articles/17_Part_of_the_Master_Plan.pdf
geographic Greenland
geographic_facet Greenland
genre Arctic
Greenland
Narsaq
genre_facet Arctic
Greenland
Narsaq
op_source Zeuthen , J W 2017 , ' Part of the Master Plan? Chinese Investment in Rare Earth Mining in Greenland ' , Arctic Yearbook , vol. 2017 . < https://www.arcticyearbook.com/images/Articles_2017/scholarly-articles/17_Part_of_the_Master_Plan.pdf >
op_rights info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess
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