Antarctica airport plan criticised by environmentalists
Environmental scientists have criticised Australian plans to build a new airport and 2.7km runway in Antarctica.
Due to weather conditions, flights from Australia to Antarctica are currently only possible at the beginning and end of summer.
The proposed airport - located at the Vestfold Hills in Princess Elizabeth Land - would provide year-long access for scientists and emergency teams to Davis research station, Australia’s most southerly base in Antarctica.
However environmental concerns have been raised, with the scheme likely to involve blasting petrel rookeries, disturbing penguin colonies and encasing a stretch of the wilderness in more than 115,000t of concrete.
Last modified on Thu 31 Dec 2020 13.10 EST
Australia is planning to build Antarctica’s biggest infrastructure project: a new airport and runway that would increase the human footprint in the world’s greatest wilderness by an estimated 40%.
The mega-scheme is likely to involve blasting petrel rookeries, disturbing penguin colonies and encasing a stretch of the wilderness in more than 115,000 tonnes of concrete.
The government in Canberra says the project on the Vestfold Hills of Princess Elizabeth Land is necessary to provide year-round access for scientists and emergency teams to Davis research station, Australia’s most southerly base in Antarctica. Strategic concerns are also a consideration; Australia is keen to counter China’s growing presence on the frozen southern continent.