Brazil to open new Antarctic research base

Brazil invested nearly $100 million in rebuilding the Comandante Ferraz Antarctic Station on King George Island
Brazil invested nearly $100 million in rebuilding the Comandante Ferraz Antarctic Station on King George Island

Brazil will open a new research base in Antarctica this week, officials said Tuesday, eight years after a fire destroyed its original scientific outpost.

The government invested nearly $100 million in the reconstruction of the Comandante Ferraz Antarctic Station, a 48,500-square-foot complex on King George Island, the largest in the South Shetland archipelago, said.

Vice President Hamilton Mourao and Science and Technology Minister Marcos Pontes will attend the official opening ceremony, which Brazil's Navy said was scheduled for Wednesday.

The base has been built on the site of the previous facility, which was largely razed in a 2012 fire caused by a fuel leak. Two Brazilian soldiers were killed in the blaze.

Scientific research continued in a temporary installation.

Since it was established in 1984, the base has been used for research into meteorology, biology, chemistry and medicine.

The new center—built by Chinese state-owned company CEIEC—consists of 17 laboratories and accommodation for 64 people.

About 30 countries, all members of the 1959 Antarctic Treaty, operate research bases in Antarctica. The pact aims to reduce the likelihood of confrontations over territorial disputes there.

Brazil joined the treaty in 1975.

The new base was been built on the site of the previous facility, which was largely razed in a February 2012 fire caused by a fu
The new base was been built on the site of the previous facility, which was largely razed in a February 2012 fire caused by a fuel leak that killed two Brazilian soldiers

© 2020 AFP

Citation: Brazil to open new Antarctic research base (2020, January 14) retrieved 5 January 2023 from https://phys.org/news/2020-01-brazil-antarctic-base.html
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