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AnorTech Inc V.ANOR

Alternate Symbol(s):  HUDRF

AnorTech Inc., formerly Hudson Resources Inc., is a Canada-based technology company. The Company is focused on the development of green technologies made from anorthosite (aluminum calcium silicate) rock. The Company is focused on three global markets: green alumina, CO2 free cement and concrete thermal energy storage systems. The Company owns 100% of the Gronne Bjerg Anorthosite project in Greenland, which is located southwest Greenland near the capital city of Nuuk. The Project hosts a quality anorthosite (calcium aluminum silicate) body. The Company also has a 5% carried interest on the Sarfartoq rare earth element project in Greenland, partnered with Neo North Star Resources. The Sarfartoq carbonatite project hosts an advanced rare earth element project rich in neodymium and praseodymium.


TSXV:ANOR - Post by User

Bullboard Posts
Post by chux02on Mar 06, 2014 2:36pm
183 Views
Post# 22290521

Greenland embraces mining rush, but

Greenland embraces mining rush, but https://www.mining.com/greenland-embraces-mining-rush-but-wont-favour-one-country-alone-prime-minister-43629/

Greenland embraces mining rush, but won’t ‘favour one country alone’ — Prime Minister

Cecilia Jamasmie | March 6, 2014
Greenland embraces mining rush, but won’t ‘favour one country alone’ — Prime Minister

Village of Tasiilaq, Greenland.

Greenland’s Prime Minister Aleqa Hammond said Thursday the country is fostering stronger ties with countries such as the US, amid an increasing international rush for the mineral and energy resources melting ice caps are revealing in the Arctic.

In an interview with Financial Times (subs. required), the authority said the region is becoming an area of great strategic importance.

Well, no wonder. According to recent studies, the Arctic holds over a fifth of the world’s untapped, recoverable oil and gas resources, as well as significant reserves of rare earth, coal, uranium, gold, diamonds, zinc, platinum, nickel and iron ore. These riches are expected to attract over $100 billion in investments over the next decade, despite the region’s adverse climate and dense sea ice.

“If we could do it without [foreign workers] we would, but we do not have the choice. We are only 56,000 in Greenland and that includes non-Greenlanders,” she told FT.

For that reason, she said, the government is opened to seek investment from across the world.

Damage alert

While the melting ice cap in the Arctic has opened up new shipping routes that significantly cut transport times and distances between Europe and Asia, and made riches more accessible, the very idea of allowing mining in the region horrifies environmentalists.

“Cleaning up any oil spill in the Arctic, particularly in ice-covered areas, would present multiple obstacles, which together constitute a unique and hard-to-manage risk,” said

Yet the allure of accessing 13% of the world’s undiscovered oil, 30% of its untapped natural gas and 20% of the global liquid gas reserves, according to data from the US Geological Survey, seems unlikely to stop investors.

In fact, Hammond said she expected three or four major mines to be operating by 2022.

Image by AntoniO BovinO via Flickr.


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