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Greenland Agrees to Alcoa Project Study
The parliament strongly endorsed Greenland Home Rule
governments recommendation that the proposed 340,000 metric ton
per year smelter should be sited at Maniitsoq and allocated significant
funding to support the joint studies. These studies, which will extend
through 2009, will delve in detail into the economic, social, and environmental
aspects of the proposed facility. The parliament is expected to convene
again in 2009 to consider Greenlands ownership position in this
project.
Bernt Reitan, Alcoa Executive Vice President, and President, Primary Products
paid tribute to the diligence and thoroughness of the Greenland Home Rule
Government, and the Greenlandic parliament in considering this project.
We are being warmly welcomed and involved in a process that the
government and the parliament are leading with exceptional care. It provides
us with a great deal of comfort that our Greenlandic partners are firmly
committed to the studies required to determine the feasibility of this
proposed project, said Reitan. We are together building the
foundation for not only a new industrial base for the Greenlandic economy,
but also the beginnings of a long and mutually rewarding friendship.
The Greenland Home Rule Government has been considering diversification
into manufacturing industry to strengthen the Greenlandic economy for
some time and has actively been investigating the aluminum industry in
general and specifically Alcoa as a potential partner since mid-2006.
The proposed smelter would combine Greenlands abundant renewable
hydropower potential with Alcoas 100+ years of experience in developing
and operating aluminum smelters around the world in a manner that is sustainable,
sensitive to the environment, and valued by the communities in which the
company operates.
The now endorsed site for the proposed smelter was selected after extensive
collaborative studies involving Alcoa, the Greenland Home Rule government,
and the communities of Nuuk, Sisimiut, and Maniitsoq, all of which have
expressed strong support for the project.
If feasibility is proven, production at the new smelter would be anticipated
to begin 2014-2015.
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