The Manila Times

Chinese icebreaker steams for Antarctica in polar power play

- AFP

BEIJING: The Chinese icebreaker Xuelong steamed south from Shanghai on Wednesday bound for Antarctica, where it will establish China’s newest base as Beijing strives to become a polar power.

China is a latecomer in the race for pole position but its interest in Antarctica has grown along with its eco foothold on the frozen continent, more than some nations that got there earlier.

China is ploughing money into polar exploratio­n and research as other countries like the United States pull back under funding constraint­s and a glut of other global priorities.

An internatio­nal treaty suspends all territoria­l claims to Antarctica, essentiall­y setting it aside as a

That “provides a precious opportunit­y to quickly develop China’s polar bases,” Qin Weijia, director of the China Arctic and Antarctic Administra­tion, said at an annual meeting on the poles last month.

China has rapidly built up activities on the continent, building new bases and commission­ing polar become a “polar power.”

“The fact that China has coined this new term and has made it an important part of their foreign policy shows the level of ambition and forward thinking that China has,” said Anne-Marie Brady, a Global Fellow at the Wilson Center.

Brady’s research, published in her book “China as a Polar Great Power,” shows that China is already the pre-eminent spender on Antarctic programmes, when its logistics, infrastruc­ture and research funding are added together.

The multilater­al Antarctic Treaty bars mineral exploitati­on on the continent, but that may change in 2048 when rules governing the treaty change.

Some researcher­s worry that resource-hungry China’s interest in the South Pole is a thinly veiled cover to allow mapping of the continent in preparatio­n for a future when mining and drilling may be allowed.

Lin Shanqing, deputy director of the State Oceanic Administra­tion which oversees China’s polar programs, said as much last week.

China must speed up developmen­t of “polar prospectin­g and extraction equipment,” Lin said at the administra­tion’s annual meeting.

Snow dragon

The 334- person crew of the Xuelong, which means “Snow Dragon,” will establish a temporary 206-square-meter base on rocky Inexpressi­ble Island, a leader of the expedition told the China Daily.

This will eventually be developed into China’s fifth base, with work expected to be completed around 2022.

China has a growing collection of outposts, with its largest - the Great Wall station - able to pack in 80 researcher­s in the summer months. The base was not built until 1985, more than 80 years after Argentina es

“China will be one of the few countries with a considerab­le number of bases spread out over the region,” said Marc Lanteigne, a lecturer at Massey University Albany in New Zealand.

 ?? AFP PHOTO ?? SHOW OF FORCE The Chinese icebreaker, Xuelong, or “Snow Dragon,, sets off from a port in Shanghai on Wednesday. The Chinese icebreaker Xuelong steamed south from Shanghai Antarctica, where it will establish China’s newest base as Beijing strives to...
AFP PHOTO SHOW OF FORCE The Chinese icebreaker, Xuelong, or “Snow Dragon,, sets off from a port in Shanghai on Wednesday. The Chinese icebreaker Xuelong steamed south from Shanghai Antarctica, where it will establish China’s newest base as Beijing strives to...

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