About Greenland Times

In recent years, Greenland has moved into the center of international attention. The United States, The European Union and NATO are all looking north. Questions about security, resources and sovereignty are no longer abstract.

At the same time, Greenland is still difficult to follow for anyone outside the country.

Most news is published in Greenlandic or Danish. Political communication increasingly happens directly from politicians, often in Greenlandic, especially on social media. For international readers, this creates a gap. It is hard to access information, hard to follow developments in real time, and even harder to understand what it all means.

Greenland Times is an attempt to close that gap.

This is not a translation service and not a news wire. The aim is to make sense of developments and explain why they matter. The articles draw on reporting from Greenlandic, Danish and international media, but are written as independent analyses.

The focus is simple. What is actually happening, and what does it reveal about Greenland’s position in a changing geopolitical landscape.

Greenland Times is independent. It is not affiliated with any political party, institution or interest group. It reflects one perspective, but it aims to be a clear and informed one.


About the author

My name is Hans Brummerstedt. I was born and raised in Nuuk.

I hold a Bachelor’s degree in Social Science from the University of Greenland and a Master’s degree in Political Communication from Roskilde University. I moved to Copenhagen to continue my studies and have since worked at the Danish Tax Agency and the Ministry of Taxation. Today, I work with IT project management and AI at the City of Copenhagen. I am also completing a Master’s degree in IT Leadership at the IT University of Copenhagen.

Throughout my studies, I focused on Greenlandic politics and Greenland’s role in the international arena. I have spent years reading and writing about Greenland’s political development, its institutions and its relationship with larger powers.

My work has been published in Information, Berlingske and Sermitsiaq. I have been interviewed by Reuters, Radio France, DR and other international media.
I have also participated as a panelist in debates on Greenland.

I am also a producer on the documentary No Place for Football, which will premiere at the Docland Film Festival in April 2026.

I live in Rødovre, Denmark with my partner and our two children.

Greenland Times is an attempt to write about Greenland in a way that is accessible to readers who are not already inside the conversation.

You are welcome to get in touch.