Dubai Telegraph - Sustainability at centre of British polar science strategy

EUR -
AED 4.305996
AFN 77.378996
ALL 96.429976
AMD 447.272622
ANG 2.099071
AOA 1075.092311
ARS 1700.317745
AUD 1.772847
AWG 2.110323
AZN 1.984833
BAM 1.957456
BBD 2.362749
BDT 143.46441
BGN 1.956785
BHD 0.442021
BIF 3476.171008
BMD 1.172402
BND 1.514581
BOB 8.106168
BRL 6.475059
BSD 1.173117
BTN 105.841784
BWP 15.502576
BYN 3.441885
BYR 22979.073104
BZD 2.359386
CAD 1.615224
CDF 2654.31743
CHF 0.931262
CLF 0.02723
CLP 1068.221694
CNY 8.255173
CNH 8.246592
COP 4529.82013
CRC 584.506875
CUC 1.172402
CUP 31.068645
CVE 110.734017
CZK 24.354476
DJF 208.358669
DKK 7.471446
DOP 73.333545
DZD 152.065704
EGP 55.710651
ERN 17.586025
ETB 181.930301
FJD 2.686852
FKP 0.875634
GBP 0.876088
GEL 3.153955
GGP 0.875634
GHS 13.511983
GIP 0.875634
GMD 86.165707
GNF 10182.30863
GTQ 8.984791
GYD 245.437026
HKD 9.122165
HNL 30.69323
HRK 7.533966
HTG 153.643237
HUF 387.71447
IDR 19575.708241
ILS 3.762008
IMP 0.875634
INR 105.818396
IQD 1535.846213
IRR 49387.421137
ISK 147.613305
JEP 0.875634
JMD 187.702773
JOD 0.831252
JPY 182.488988
KES 151.121331
KGS 102.526223
KHR 4701.330347
KMF 493.580931
KPW 1055.154485
KRW 1731.157173
KWD 0.359807
KYD 0.977527
KZT 605.251959
LAK 25389.530667
LBP 104988.571378
LKR 362.957011
LRD 207.995533
LSL 19.620151
LTL 3.461797
LVL 0.709174
LYD 6.354385
MAD 10.75675
MDL 19.783734
MGA 5308.634704
MKD 61.571894
MMK 2462.110428
MNT 4159.215563
MOP 9.402514
MRU 46.615036
MUR 53.977413
MVR 18.125323
MWK 2037.634391
MXN 21.099092
MYR 4.79336
MZN 74.928369
NAD 19.625962
NGN 1709.220848
NIO 43.026402
NOK 11.904227
NPR 169.343241
NZD 2.030395
OMR 0.45069
PAB 1.173137
PEN 3.946341
PGK 4.981827
PHP 68.691212
PKR 328.565595
PLN 4.203084
PYG 7831.791611
QAR 4.268945
RON 5.091041
RSD 117.432755
RUB 93.706335
RWF 1702.327252
SAR 4.397469
SBD 9.543487
SCR 17.349959
SDG 705.205169
SEK 10.878874
SGD 1.512621
SHP 0.879605
SLE 28.253955
SLL 24584.681513
SOS 670.026432
SRD 45.346176
STD 24266.347892
STN 24.854916
SVC 10.264902
SYP 12964.84622
SZL 19.62574
THB 36.825376
TJS 10.83368
TMT 4.11513
TND 3.405238
TOP 2.822862
TRY 50.186178
TTD 7.959937
TWD 36.964771
TZS 2919.280551
UAH 49.548468
UGX 4190.634054
USD 1.172402
UYU 45.969864
UZS 14098.130434
VES 327.350262
VND 30863.474462
VUV 142.297798
WST 3.264804
XAF 656.512318
XAG 0.017875
XAU 0.000271
XCD 3.168474
XCG 2.114188
XDR 0.814748
XOF 654.200333
XPF 119.331742
YER 279.559334
ZAR 19.618272
ZMK 10553.017918
ZMW 26.688599
ZWL 377.512866
  • SCS

    0.0200

    16.14

    +0.12%

  • RBGPF

    -1.7900

    80.22

    -2.23%

  • RIO

    0.4400

    77.63

    +0.57%

  • CMSC

    0.0300

    23.29

    +0.13%

  • BCC

    1.4100

    77.7

    +1.81%

  • CMSD

    0.0000

    23.28

    0%

  • RELX

    0.0900

    40.65

    +0.22%

  • VOD

    -0.0100

    12.8

    -0.08%

  • RYCEF

    0.6300

    15.4

    +4.09%

  • JRI

    0.0000

    13.43

    0%

  • BCE

    -0.3000

    22.85

    -1.31%

  • NGG

    -0.7700

    76.39

    -1.01%

  • BTI

    -0.1300

    57.04

    -0.23%

  • GSK

    -0.4200

    48.29

    -0.87%

  • AZN

    0.7500

    90.61

    +0.83%

  • BP

    -1.1600

    33.31

    -3.48%

Sustainability at centre of British polar science strategy
Sustainability at centre of British polar science strategy / Photo: Daniel LEAL - AFP

Sustainability at centre of British polar science strategy

With research stations shifting to renewable energy and artificial intelligence mapping out fuel-efficient marine routes, the British Antarctic Survey is putting sustainability at the heart of its new 10-year plan.

Text size:

"The main target for our strategy is really focused on climate change because the polar regions are the regions on Earth which are changing most drastically," BAS director Jane Francis said, adding that these changes are "affecting the whole planet".

"What we're trying to do is plan the future of our science more now than we used to, because I think it's really so urgent that we can understand how our climate is changing. We need to support the relevant people in making good decisions about renewable energy, about how to save carbon, and how to live in better balance with our planet," she told AFP.

At the BAS headquarters in Cambridge, eastern England, AFP saw some of the cutting-edge technology used by scientists studying the polar regions.

Autonomous underwater vehicles are used to collect data from deep within the icy waters of the Southern Ocean, which encircles the Antarctic and acts as a carbon sink, absorbing heat and carbon from the atmosphere.

From the sky, drones and satellite technology help monitor and count animal populations in remote or inaccessible parts of the polar regions.

- Ice core study -

To gather information about atmospheric conditions in the past, scientists are drilling into ice sheets and glaciers to retrieve ice cores, some containing ice that is hundreds of thousands of years old.

The ice is cut inside a special cold room at the BAS labs where the temperature is kept at -25 degrees Celsius (-13 degrees Fahrenheit).

The air bubbles trapped inside are extracted to measure the concentration of greenhouse gases, such as carbon dioxide and methane.

In the field, the BAS currently operates five research stations in the Antarctic, one of them only during the southern hemisphere summer.

The stations are serviced by a fleet of vehicles, ranging from snowmobiles to Sno-Cats and tractors, that make their way through the workshops at BAS headquarters before being deployed.

The kit is modified to ensure it's "fit for purpose when it lands on the ice", for example by installing pre-heating systems that will help the engines start in freezing temperatures, BAS head of vehicles engineering Ben Norrish said.

Some snowmobiles are equipped with vehicle-tracking devices that have a distress button to request assistance from the station but also keep a record of refuelling stops and other activity while out in the field.

It gives BAS "some kind of carbon accounting to see where we've gone during any given season," Norrish added.

- Net-zero targets -

Reducing carbon emissions is part of the BAS's wider sustainability strategy with the aim to be fully decarbonised across its operations by 2040, said Net Zero transition lead Nopi Exizidou.

"For our research stations, we are investing a lot in renewable energy technology," Exizidou said, adding that BAS aims to decarbonise its polar stations within the next seven years.

The Bird Island station, off the northwest tip of South Georgia, west of the Falklands, is using a solar energy system and battery storage that is expected to reduce fuel use by 50 percent.

King Edward Point station, midway on South Georgia, has a hydropower plant, which meets 80 percent of energy demand in heating and electricity.

At Rothera, the largest British Antarctic research station located on Adelaide Island off the west coast of Antarctica, the new two-storey energy-efficient Discovery Building is set to replace several old buildings.

BAS also has a team of engineers developing an artificial intelligence and machine learning toolkit that will help plan marine routes and run research ships, such as the £200 million RRS Sir David Attenborough, more efficiently.

"They are developing tools that will sit alongside the master of the ship and will help him take more informed decisions on how to go from A to B," said Exizidou.

"We are developing, as we say, the Google maps of the Southern Ocean."

BAS director Francis said the changing technology that researchers will be using in the coming years is "really revolutionary now".

"We don't need to take the ship so far, we don't need to take the aircraft using fuel, we can send out our drones, we can send out our marine robots.

"And it means that we can collect data, so much more data, faster and do much better science."

S.Mohideen--DT