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May 10, 2002
Greenlanders find nothing
to buy in Iqaluit
Trade Show delegates
eager to import Nunavut goods but leave empty handed
JANE
GEORGE
Managers from Greenlands
largest retail chain, Pilersuisoq, came to Iqaluit last week to see what Nunavut
had to offer.
Pilersuisoq was the sole
company from Greenland at this years Nunavut Trade Show.
"We have no trade
with Nunavut," said Pilersuisoqs supply manager, Bernhard Christensen.
"We wanted to see if there are any trade possibilities with Nunavut, but
I dont think its looking very good because they have no manufactured
products."
Handicrafts, furs and fish
are available in Greenland. What Pilersuisoq seeks for its stores is merchandise
that cant be found locally manufactured items or fresh produce.
"But there are no
tomato plants in Iqaluit," Christensen said.
Pilersuisoq is interested
in products such as nikkuk, which are in short supply in Greenland, but Christensen
said Nunavut wouldnt be able to meet the demand.
However, even without obvious
candidates for trade between Greenland and Nunavut, Christensen said it would
be good to have a regular air link between Greenland and Canada.
"At least we would
have the opportunity to see what we could be interested in buying," Christensen
said.
To attend the trade fair
in Iqaluit, Pilersuisoqs five-person delegation had to travel from Sisiumiut
via charter.
In the past, Pilersuisoq
has bought bikes and apples from Canada, but now, whatever the company buys
must be sent via one of the five ships that travel annually between Greenland
and Canada.
Pilersuisoq operates stores,
distributes fuel, Nuuk Imeq brand soft drinks and beer, and provides banking,
post office and travel services throughout Greenland. Prices are uniform throughout
the entire network of stores.
It has 1,400 employees,
95 per cent of them Greenlandic.
The company, owned by Greenlands
Home Rule Government, is the second largest company in Greenland and does $200
million worth of business in its grocery division alone.
Founded in 1992, Pilersuisoq
only started making a profit in 1996. Recently, it began handing over its services
to the private sector in Greenlands six largest communities.
"Theres no tradition
of private business in Greenland," Christensen said.
Pilersuisoq still has a
monopoly on retail and fuel services in Greenlands 53 smaller settlements
and in many of its 12 towns.
But the company wants to
become more competitive even if this competition is internal.
"Traditional monopolies
do not question their own mode of operation, and there is a risk that they will
not be able to review and improve services of their own accord," says Pilersuisoqs
new action plan, called "A time for Action."
Since 1998, the company
has allocated more money to educate its employees.
Improving literacy and
citizenship among consumers is also among its goals. Pilersuisoq founded the
"northernmost internet café in the world in Inaarsuit."
Although its a government-owned
company, Pilersuisoq seems to promote the kind of aims that are usually associated
with cooperatives and wants to "contribute to the creation of values
for individual citizens and for society as a whole."
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