Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Lugging icebergs dreamed in Dubai

They’re floated as water source

- FAY ABUELGASIM AND SAM McNEIL

DUBAI, United Arab Emirates — Where many see the crumbling polar ice caps as a distressin­g sign of global warming, a Dubai company sees them as a source of profit, and a way to offset the effects of climate change in the increasing­ly sweltering Persian Gulf.

The National Advisor Bureau Limited has drawn up plans to harvest icebergs in the southern Indian Ocean and tow them 5,700 miles away to the Persian Gulf, where they could be melted down for fresh water and marketed as a tourist attraction.

“The icebergs are just floating in the Indian Ocean. They are up for grabs to whoever can take them,” managing director Abdullah al-Shehi said in an interview in his Dubai office. He said he hopes to begin harvesting them by 2019.

It is perhaps no surprise that the idea would originate in Dubai, which is already famous for its indoor ski slope, artificial islands and the world’s tallest building. But the plan to harvest icebergs faces a wide array of legal, financial and logistical hurdles — and environmen­talists are less than thrilled.

The company would send ships down to Heard Island, an Australian nature reserve in the southern Indian Ocean, where they would steer between icebergs the size of cities in search of truck-size chunks known as growlers. Workers would then secure

them to the boats with nets and embark on a yearlong cruise to the United Arab Emirates.

The company believes that, as most of the icebergs’ mass is underwater, they would not melt significan­tly during the voyage. Al-Shehi said each iceberg would hold about 20 billion gallons of water that could be harvested without costly desaliniza­tion, which currently provides nearly all of the Gulf region’s water.

Masdar, a government­backed clean-energy outfit in the United Arab Emirates, is exploring new technologi­es to meet the country’s water needs. The United Arab Emirates’ Energy Ministry issued a statement last week denying “reports” that an iceberg was

being imported, without specifying the reports to which it referred.

Al-Shehi said his project is a private initiative and that he would seek government approval once his company completes its feasibilit­y study. He declined to share the company’s cost estimates, and said it has not carried out an environmen­tal-impact study.

Robert Brears, the founder of the climate think tank Mitidaptio­n, has studied the feasibilit­y of Antarctic ice harvesting and estimates the project would require an initial outlay of at least $500 million.

The challenges begin at Heard Island, where Australia strictly limits access in order to preserve the area’s rich ecosystem of migratory birds, seals, penguins and fish, which could be disrupted by large ships. Antarctica itself is subject to global treaties

that mandate environmen­tal regulation­s and ban mining and military activities.

Even if the company secures the necessary approvals from multiple government­s, the wrangling itself could prove daunting.

“There are thousands and thousands of icebergs drifting around and they can move without warning,” said Christophe­r Readinger, who heads the Antarctic team at the U.S. National Ice Center. “Storms down there can be really brutal, and there’s really not anyone that can help.”

The interagenc­y group uses satellites and floating sensors to track large icebergs in order to warn fishing and science vessels. One of the icebergs it tracked last month was twice the size of Manhattan.

Antarctica holds 60 percent of the world’s fresh water,

frozen in an ice shelf that sheds nearly 1.2 trillion tons of icebergs a year, according to NASA. The ice loss is accelerati­ng as global temperatur­es rise.

In the Arctic, Canadian “iceberg cowboys” use rifles to blast off chunks of icebergs that are later sold to wineries, breweries and vodka distilleri­es. A Norwegian company sells 750 milliliter bottles of melted iceberg for $100 each.

But iceberg wranglers off Antarctica would find a leaner herd.

“It’s the driest ice in the world,” Brears said. “You could melt a lot of this ice and get very little water from it.”

Environmen­talists meanwhile point to simpler measures that could be taken to address climate change in the Middle East, such as drip-irrigation, fixing leaks and water conservati­on.

“This region is the heartland of the global oil industry, it will be at the forefront of experienci­ng these massive, insane heat waves, and there’s only one way to avoid this — reducing emissions and keeping all fossil fuels in the ground,” said Hoda Baraka, spokesman for the climate advocacy group 350.org.

Green investment groups are unlikely to finance the iceberg project, said Charlotte Streck, director of the consultanc­y firm Climate Focus. She said the project is “an exceptiona­lly futile and expensive way” to solve the Gulf’s water woes — and “seems to run counter to all ideas of climate change adaptation.”

Al-Shehi is undeterred, and insists the project will have no impact on Antarctica or any other natural environmen­t. The whole process, he said, “will be a drop in the ocean.”

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