Las Vegas Review-Journal

Work on big telescope in Hawaii halted

- The Associated Press

HONOLULU — Scientists planning to build one of the world’s largest telescopes on a Hawaii mountain said Wednesday constructi­on won’t begin until at least next year.

TMT Internatio­nal Observator­y Vice President Gordon Squires told Hawaii News Now that the coronaviru­s pandemic presents a complicate­d and unsafe situation for moving ahead.

“With the pandemic and other factors that have come in, winter seems like a long ways away, but it’s not that far away and for us to resume constructi­on activities on site, winter on Mauna Kea just isn’t feasible,” Squires told the TV station.

He told the Honolulu Star-advertiser that it takes a minimum of three months to gear up for the start of constructi­on during optimal times. But bringing equipment and personnel from the U.S. mainland could now require double the preparatio­n time, he said.

Still, Squires said the consortium behind the $2.4 billion project remains committed to Hawaii.

A group of universiti­es in California and Canada plan to build the Thirty Meter Telescope at the mountain’s summit together with partners from China, India and Japan.

Native Hawaiian activists prevented the constructi­on from moving ahead last year by blocking the road to the mountainto­p. They say Mauna Kea’s summit is sacred and the new observator­y will further defile the site, which already hosts several telescopes built in recent decades. Law enforcemen­t arrested several dozen elders participat­ing in the demonstrat­ion.

Kealoha Pisciotta, one of the leaders in the telescope fight, said she was saddened by the consortium’s new plans.

“While it gives us some respite, it still means we’re waiting for a year for the continued desecratio­n of our mountain to occur,” told The Associated Press.

In March, protesters who had been camped out on Mauna Kea to block constructi­on dismantled their large tents and left amid virus-spread concerns. A few protesters remained, Pisciotta said.

Still, she said TMT’S intention to continue constructi­on later means “the human and civil rights of the Hawaiian people will continue to be violated and more arrests of our elders will continue.”

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