• Kåre Hendriksen

    (b. 1956) Ph.D. and MA in Technical Environmental Management. Associate Professor in Sustainable Arctic Infrastructure at the Department of Planning, Aalborg University.

Sisimiut

Sisimiut is Greenland’s second largest town and the northernmost, which is ice-free throughout the year, as well as the country’s main fishing port. The tow...

Tasiilaq

Located on the shore of a fjord that looks like a lake, the town got the name, Tasiilaq, which means ‘the place that looks like a lake’. Tasiilaq has a popu...

Aasiaat

Aasiaat is located on a roughly 7-km long and 3-km wide and relatively low archipelago island with very modest vegetation. The town shares the place as the coun...

Qeqertarsuaq

Qeqertarsuaq on the south side of the island of Qeqertarsuaq (Disko) is named after the island, which means ‘the big island’. Qeqertarsuaq is also the name ...

Kangaatsiaq

Kangaatsiaq, which means ‘the small promontory’, has never been a colony and has no Danish name. As the only district besides Upernavik, most of its residen...

Narsaq

Narsaq, meaning ‘the plain’, is situated on a large, flat grassy peninsula surrounded by the fjords Tunulliarfik (Eriksfjord) and Ikersuaq (Bredefjord). The...

Nanortalik

Nanortalik is located about 100 km northwest of Uummannarsuaq (Cape Farewell) and is Greenland’s southernmost town. Nanortalik means ‘the place with polar b...

Uummannaq

Uummannaq means ‘invigorating’ or ‘heart-shaped’ and is named after the town landmark, the 1,170 m high mountain north of the town. Unlike most other co...