Greenland Mines Stakes Claim in Global Race for Critical Minerals
Western governments are scrambling to decouple their supply chains from China, turning the spotlight on Greenland’s untapped geology. Nasdaq-listed Greenland Mines Ltd. is capitalizing on this geopolitical shift, securing a strategic investment from SRX Global and closing a share-exchange deal with AnorTech to expand its North Atlantic footprint.

The dual moves signal an aggressive push to build a multi-asset platform that spans rare-earth magnets and precious metals. By framing its operations as a 'North Atlantic Critical Metals Corridor,' Greenland Mines aims to bridge the gap between resource-rich Greenland and downstream industrial markets in North America and Europe. This strategy targets the critical vulnerability created by China’s long-standing dominance in the mining and refining of rare-earth elements, which are vital for everything from electric vehicle motors to advanced defense hardware.
SRX Global’s involvement provides more than just capital; it offers industry validation for a company still in its development stage. Simultaneously, the share-exchange with AnorTech allows Greenland Mines to broaden its asset exposure—including the Skaergaard project and the Sarfartoq neodymium-praseodymium rare earths site—without depleting its cash reserves. While the company maintains an unusual dual-track approach by also holding a biotech program focused on ALS treatment, the core of its current investor appeal rests on its ability to execute within the volatile landscape of the critical-minerals supply chain. Success remains tethered to the complexities of permitting, technical development, and the ongoing, high-stakes race to secure Western mineral independence.
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