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Annual Report 2007 - Resources... for life

Geological Survey of Denmark and Greenland (GEUS)
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Publisher and copyright GEUS, 2008, Author/editor: Henrik Højmark Thomsen - ISBN: 978-87-7871-221-9; ISSN:1901-211X
Download entire report geus07-uk.pdf (pdf-file, ~3.4 mb)
  • New framework, new name, new top management and a new department
  • Introduction
  • Databanks and information
    • Storage, quality assurance, and presentation of geological knowledge and data
      • Drinking-water data on the internet
      • Access to knowledge about world-class ice in Greenland
      • Electronic access to peer-reviewed publications
      • Guide to the interesting geology of South Greenland
      • Stable access to national drilling and water data
  • Water resources
    • Procuring knowledge to permit optimal management of our water resources
      • National groundwater mapping
      • New methods for adaptive management of water resources
      • International research evaluation
      • New method for soil and groundwater screening
      • The water cycle under a changed climate
  • Energy resources
    • Procuring of knowledge for continued exploration and exploitation of energy resources in Denmark and Greenland
      • Opportunities for CO2 storage in Europe
      • Hunt for geothermal energy
      • Increasing oil abstraction using a climate-friendly method
      • Great interest in oil exploration in Greenland
      • The Continental Shelf Project – underpinning possible national claims
  • Mineral resources
    • Creating the scientific basis for targeted and environment-friendly exploitation of mineral deposits in Greenland and Denmark
      • Testing of a new stable, self-consolidating concrete
      • Ressource evaluation and geological mapping
      • Many new maps of Greenlanc
      • More new diamond finds
      • Web-based report database for industry
  • Nature and climate
    • Identifying processes leading to the current climate and environment situation in Denmark and the North Atlantic in particular
      • Reduced sea ice cover in the Arctic Ocean
      • Richer marine environmentin previous warm period
      • A new tool for better nature protection in the Baltic Sea
      • Addressing the world's environment and resource problems
      • A digital map of valuable geological areas
  • Glimpses of the year
    • News 2007
      • Doctorate and assigned professor
      • The world meets to make more reliable water models
      • Groundwater award for visionary efforts
      • Opening of mobile exhibition on Greenland's geology
      • Support to young Greenlanders with a feeling for oil
  • GEUS around the world
    • Knowledge building in developing countries through research and consultancy
      • Capacity building in Ghana
      • Building oil-geological knowledge in East and Southeast Asia
      • Sustainable small-scale mining
      • Building African oil expertise
  • Key figures
  • Organisation

Introduction

Annual report 2007 provides a brief insight into an exceptionally eventful year, which has been epochmaking in the 120-year history of GEUS. As a consequence of the government's decision to reorganise the Danish research landscape in 2006, GEUS is now subject to its own act, Act no. 356 of 6 June 2007, which was adopted unanimously by the Danish Parliament. GEUS became one of three national research institutions and changed its Danish name, although the English name remains the Geological Survey of Denmark and Greenland (GEUS).

In 2006 the government also decided to establish a national geocenter, Geocenter Denmark, as a part of the focus on the research area. In 2007 the Center's statute was approved by the University of Aarhus, the University of Copenhagen and GEUS. Geocenter Denmark will be an important instrument in reaching the government's goals in the geoscientific area.

GEUS' department in Aarhus opened on 2 January and has now become an integrated part of GEUS, carrying out tasks within groundwater mapping and groundwater monitoring in close cooperation with the new environment centres and the Agency for Spatial and Environmental Planning. With the formation of the new government after the general election in November 2007, a new Ministry of Climate and Energy was established, and GEUS was transferred to the new Ministry from the Ministry of the Environment. GEUS already had a large portfolio of tasks in the energy and climate area which fell within the new Ministry's field of responsibility, and GEUS is also continuing its work for the Ministry of the Environment. This work has therefore been included in GEUS' new performance contract, which commenced in January 2008 and runs until the end of 2011.

In 2007 the common public-sector data solutions for the environment area were implemented, and GEUS' extensive databases on geology and groundwater became a daily tool for state, municipalities and regions. Combating climate changes and adapting to those we cannot avoid have created a need for solutions requiring GEUS know-how in areas such as geothermal energy, CO2 storage, impacts on the water cycle and leaching of nutrients and pesticides to the groundwater, flooding, coastal erosion and developments in the melting of the Inland Ice in Greenland. GEUS is well prepared for this interdisciplinary challenge. GEUS anticipates new uses for geological knowledge and a new understanding of the importance of our climatic past, as well as a great need for knowledge of geological processes and natural resources.

Fossil energy sources will continue to be an important part of Denmark's energy supply for many years to come, and a source of considerable revenues for the Danish society. Focus on the climate must therefore be combined with an open-minded understanding of the values of subsurface resources. Rapidly increasing oil prices have resulted in enormous demand for knowledge about oil/gas resources - also at GEUS.

Interest in geological natural resources of oil/gas and minerals in Greenland is greater than ever, where strategically it constitutes an important aspect in Greenland's endeavours to create a self-sufficient economy. Therefore, the Home Rule Commission has considered the role of GEUS, and both Denmark and Greenland want GEUS to continue as the institution from which the authorities can seek geological advice. The ownership of potential resources below the offshore area of the Faroe Islands and Greenland received much press coverage in 2007. This is reflected in the continental shelf project, under which a large expedition was carried out in difficult ice conditions north of Greenland using two icebreakers. With an eventful year behind us, a performance contract in place until 2011, a common understanding of the model for future Denmark­-Greenland cooperation and a high demand for GEUS knowledge, we are already well into an exciting 2008.

Per Buch Andreasen
Chairman of the Board

Johnny Fredericia
Managing Director


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