While declaring that Greenland is not for sale, the country’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs took reports about President Trump’s interest in buying the world’s largest island as an opportunity to promote tourism.

“Greenland is rich in valuable resources such as minerals, the purest water and ice, fish stocks, seafood, renewable energy and is a new frontier for adventure tourism,” the ministry said on Twitter.

“We’re open for business, not for sale,” it added along with emojis for snow, a whale and a snowy mountain.

It also included a link to the Greenland tourism website.

“Greenland. The word invokes images of natural beauty, remote mountainous landscapes, Arctic wildlife,” the site says about the vast island, whose population is just 56,000 residents concentrated along the coasts.

“These are some of the reasons that tourists have long been drawn to Greenland.”

One of the country’s major newspapers, Politiken, published a cartoon featuring a faux real estate ad that touted the semi-autonomous Danish territory’s selling points — only one previous owner, beautiful land in a quiet neighborhood, good fishing and no neighbors, according to CNN.

The Danish government said it considered Trump’s apparent interest “as an expression of greater interest in investing in our country and the possibilities we offer.”

Jakob Ipsen, who runs a hotel in tiny Kulusuk on Greenland’s eastern coast, on Friday noted there’s a history of outsiders unsuccessfully wanting to take over the 772,000-square-mile island, which has shed 2 billion tons of ice in June alone due to climate change.

“Never going to happen. They tried in 1867 without luck. They tried after World War II,” Ipsen said. “It didn’t happen then and it’s not going to happen now.”

Greenland’s tourism officials did not immediately respond to a request for comment from The Post.

With Post wires