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Br.Ant.Territory : Antarctica Exploration Gets £20 Million
Submitted by (Juanita Brock) 28.10.2005 (Article Archived on 11.11.2005)

The Department of Trade and Industry has announced that £20 Million will go towards Antarctic exploration.

Photo (c) Brian Harper - An Old Halley Station at the time the Ozone Hole was discovered.

 

£20 MILLION BOOST FOR NEXT GENERATION  ANTARCTICA EXPLORATION

 

 

                                                   An Old Halley Station

 

 

Oct. 24 2005

 

Press Release - Department of Trade and Industry

 

Science and Innovation Minister, Lord Sainsbury, today announced a £20million investment in the revolutionary Halley VI Research Station in British Antarctica.

 

This investment comes from the DTI's Large Facilities Capital Fund, established to ensure UK scientists have access to leading edge, large-scale experimental projects and facilities. The Natural Environment Research Council (NERC), which the DTI funds, is also supporting the project with a grant of £4.5m. The facility will be operated by the British Antarctic Survey.

 

Lord Sainsbury said:

 

"The new station is essential to continue the long-running research on global change at the site. Antarctic discoveries, such as the ozone hole and the disintegration of ice shelves, are of vital importance if we are to protect our fragile planet Earth.

 

"There is much more we need to understand to plan for our future. Our investment is key to ensuring we have world class facilities to carry out this vital research."

 

The funding announcement comes after a competition to design the new facility was completed by the British Antarctic Survey over the summer.

 

The ground-breaking design is a modular station, elevated on ski-based jackable legs, to avoid burial by snow which can be towed across the ice. The modules are simple to construct and can be re-arranged or relocated inland periodically as the ice shelf flows towards the sea. A central module packed with stimulating areas for recreation and relaxation is flanked by a series of modules designed to suit the changing needs of the science programmes. It features renewable energy sources and new environmental strategies for fuel, waste and material handling.

 

The new complex, replacing the current Halley V Research Station, will be located 10,000 miles from the UK on the Brunt Ice Shelf, which is 150m thick and flows at a rate of 0.4 km per year northwest from Coats Land towards the sea where, at irregular intervals, it calves off as vast icebergs. Scientists predict a major calving event around 2010. There is a growing risk that ice on which the existing Halley Research Station sits could break off in the next decade.

 

 

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