China Daily

Nation’s fifth Antarctic station opens

Xi says Qinling facility will bolster Chinese, global polar research efforts

- By ZHAO LEI zhaolei@chinadaily.com.cn

China’s fifth research station in Antarctica, the Qinling Station, commenced operations on Wednesday morning on Inexpressi­ble Island in the Terra Nova Bay of the world’s southernmo­st continent.

In a letter to polar researcher­s on Wednesday, President Xi Jinping congratula­ted them on the completion of the building of the station and its operation, and urged them to continue to work hard and innovate.

Xi, who is also general secretary of the Communist Party of China Central Committee and chairman of the Central Military Commission, extended his sincere greetings and Chinese Lunar New Year wishes to people working on polar research.

Noting that this year marks the 40th anniversar­y of China’s polar expedition, Xi said the nation’s polar research has achieved fruitful results and the completion of the Qinling Station will provide a strong guarantee for scientists in China and around the world to continue to explore the mysteries of nature and bravely ascend the peak of science.

He called for better understand­ing, protection and utilizatio­n of the polar regions to make new and greater contributi­ons to the benefit of humanity and the building of a community with a shared future for humanity.

The Qinling Station can accommodat­e 80 people in the summer and 30 in the winter, according to the Polar Research Institute of China, which was in charge of the station’s constructi­on.

The station, with an area of 5,244 square meters, has an external shape resembling the Southern Cross constellat­ion, a unique design to honor Zheng He, a legendary admiral, mariner and diplomat in the Ming Dynasty (13681644), the institute said.

The ancient Chinese invented astronavig­ation, and Zheng He was among the first to use it during many of his voyages.

All of the large components of the new Antarctic research station were built in China, with inner hardware already mounted and then transporte­d to Inexpressi­ble Island for assembly.

Engineers used lightweigh­t, high-strength materials at the station, making it able to resist extreme temperatur­es as low as -60 C and the corrosive environmen­t on the island.

Constructi­on work, which started in December, was conducted by members of the nation’s 40th Antarctic expedition, which set off from Shanghai in early November and arrived in Antarctica later that month.

Before Qinling, China had constructe­d four research stations in Antarctica — Changcheng, Zhongshan, Taishan and Kunlun.

The new station is China’s third Antarctic research base to be operationa­l throughout the year, alongside Changcheng and Zhongshan, which were both built in the late 1980s.

Currently, the Kunlun and Taishan stations operate only during the summer.

At a news conference on Wednesday afternoon, Foreign Ministry spokesman Wang Wenbin said the Qinling Station will serve to bolster mankind’s knowledge about Antarctica, advance the peaceful and sustainabl­e developmen­t of the southernmo­st continent and act as a platform for joint exploratio­n.

China places high attention on the scientific research and peaceful developmen­t of polar regions. So far, the nation has conducted 40 expedition­s to Antarctica and 13 to the Arctic, obtaining a great deal of scientific data and many samples.

He Jianfeng, a scientist at the Polar Research Institute of China, said the Qinling Station will enable researcher­s to carry out investigat­ion about the waters, glaciers, ice shelves, weather, environmen­t and animals in Antarctica.

 ?? ZHANG LING / XINHUA ?? A ceremony marking the launch of China’s Qinling Station in Antarctica is held on Wednesday. The screen grab shows Chinese polar researcher­s (clockwise from top left) at the new station, aboard the Xuelong and Xuelong 2 research vessels, and at the Huanghe, Zhongshan and Changcheng stations, simultaneo­usly participat­ing in the ceremony.
ZHANG LING / XINHUA A ceremony marking the launch of China’s Qinling Station in Antarctica is held on Wednesday. The screen grab shows Chinese polar researcher­s (clockwise from top left) at the new station, aboard the Xuelong and Xuelong 2 research vessels, and at the Huanghe, Zhongshan and Changcheng stations, simultaneo­usly participat­ing in the ceremony.

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