Energy North: Renewable Solutions and Power Systems in Greenland
MTA
Assessing hydropower, wind, diesel displacement, and energy sovereignty in Greenlandic communities
2nd Edition
"Energy North: Renewable Solutions and Power Systems in Greenland" provides a comprehensive examination of Greenland's unique energy landscape, characterized by its remote, islanded communities, extreme Arctic climate, and historical reliance on imported diesel fuel. The book argues for a pragmatic transition towards reliable, affordable, and low-carbon energy systems by integrating local renewable resources like hydropower and wind with modern storage and smart control technologies. It addresses the critical need to displace expensive and environmentally impactful diesel, framing this shift as central to improving energy sovereignty and local resilience.
The text delves into the specific challenges and opportunities presented by Greenland's environment. It details the abundant potential of hydropower from glacial catchments, distinguishing between run-of-river and storage schemes, and the immense wind resources, while also confronting the engineering complexities of icing and extreme cold for turbine operation. The book emphasizes the crucial role of microgrids and islanded operations in remote settlements, highlighting the necessity of robust controls, energy storage (batteries, flywheels, hydrogen), and black-start capabilities to maintain stability and reliability in low-inertia systems. Furthermore, it explores the pivotal role of heat systems—district heating, waste heat recovery, and heat pumps—in significantly reducing overall fuel consumption by leveraging renewable electricity for heating, often the largest energy demand.
Beyond technical solutions, the book addresses the economic, policy, social, and logistical dimensions critical for successful implementation. It analyzes project economics using metrics like Levelized Cost of Energy (LCOE) and total system cost, accounting for the high capital and operational expenditures in the Arctic, and discusses financing models, risk management, and tariff design to ensure affordability. Crucially, it underscores the importance of environmental stewardship and cultural safeguards, advocating for co-design processes that integrate traditional ecological knowledge and community governance for project acceptance and long-term sustainability. The book concludes with detailed case studies from Nuuk, Sisimiut, and remote East Greenland communities, illustrating diverse pathways to decarbonization by 2030 and 2040, and provides an actionable implementation toolkit for policymakers and engineers navigating this complex, yet promising, energy transition.
This book is essential for policymakers, engineers, utility operators, and community leaders working on energy systems in Greenland and similar Arctic regions. It provides practical guidance for implementing renewable energy solutions in harsh climates, with specific attention to technical challenges like icing and permafrost while emphasizing community-centered approaches. Professionals involved in energy planning, microgrid design, renewable integration, and energy sovereignty initiatives will find actionable strategies, case studies, and implementation tools tailored to northern contexts.
January 25, 2026
75,985 words
5 hours 19 minutes
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