Greenland's capital restores power, heating after storm damaged line
- By Reuters -
- Jan 26, 2026

NUUK: Greenland’s capital restored power early on Sunday after a storm damaged a transmission cable and left thousands without electricity and heating through the cold winter night.
Electricity suddenly cut off across Nuuk late on Saturday, witnesses said.
The Nukissiorfiit utility – which supplies Nuuk from the Buksefjord hydropower plant southeast of the capital – said power came back online around 4:30 a.m. (0630 GMT).
Greenlanders are used to outages, often caused by harsh weather damaging the cable which runs through rugged terrain and spans two fjords.
Three days before the power cut, the government updated recommendations for crisis preparedness – including advice for people to keep five days’ worth of water and food – in the wake of tensions over U.S. President Donald Trump’sdemands to acquire the Danish territory.
Earlier, it was reported that he United States and Denmark will renegotiate a 1951 defence pact on Greenland, a source familiar with talks between President Donald Trump and NATO chief Mark Rutte told AFP.
The source said that European allies would also step up Arctic security, but insisted that placing American bases on Greenland under US sovereignty had not been discussed.
“The 1951 agreement will get renegotiated,” the source said.
The defence agreement, updated in 2004, already gives Washington freedom to ramp up its troop deployments, provided it informs the authorities in Denmark and Greenland in advance.
The US currently has one base on Greenland — the Pituffik Space Base on the northwest of the island that constitutes a crucial link in the US missile defence system.
Trump on Wednesday announced a framework deal after talks with Rutte at the World Economic Forum in Davos, but the details of the purported agreement remained vague.
Rutte said on Thursday one “work stream” to emerge from the meeting was “that we ensure that the Chinese and the Russians will not gain access to the Greenland economy” or militarily.
Trump’s threats to take Greenland have rocked the transatlantic alliance and plunged NATO into its biggest crisis in decades.
Some European nations have pushed for NATO to launch a mission in the Arctic to try to shore up security in the region after Trump used it to justify his desire for Greenland.