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China Arctic/Antarctic Science, Technology and Industry: News & Discussions

Two Chinese research vessels rendezvous in the Antarctic
(Xinhua) 10:21, January 07, 2017


Chinese research vessel Haiyang Liuhao (upper), also known as Ocean No. 6, sails with research vessel and icebreaker Xuelong, or "Snow Dragon", in the Antarctic, Jan. 5, 2017. The two Chinese research vessels met in the Antarctic Thursday afternoon local time. (Xinhua/Rong Qihan)





Members of research team on Chinese research vessel Haiyang Liuhao, also known as Ocean No. 6, hold a banner to greet research vessel and icebreaker Xuelong, or "Snow Dragon", in the Antarctic, Jan. 5, 2017. The two Chinese research vessels met in the Antarctic Thursday afternoon local time. (Xinhua/Wang Pan)

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Members of research team on Chinese research vessel Haiyang Liuhao, also known as Ocean No. 6, wave at research vessel and icebreaker Xuelong, or "Snow Dragon", in the Antarctic, Jan. 5, 2017. The two Chinese research vessels met in the Antarctic Thursday afternoon local time. (Xinhua/Wang Pan)
 
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A couple more pictures of the mountaineering team from China university of Geosciences.

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A video of the students.


Chinese college mountaineering team ascends South Pole peak

CGTN
Published on Jan 5, 2017

A mountaineering team from the Chinese University of Geosciences ascended Mount Vinson on the South Pole on December 25, 2016, Beijing time, completing their feat of climbing the highest mountain on each of the seven continents.
It took the team, made up of students and teachers, four years to conquer all seven summits.

After returning to their university in Wuhan, in central China's Hubei Province, the team members recalled the hardships they experienced in scaling Mount Vinson.
 
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Great Wall Station at Antarctica

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Photo taken on Jan. 4, 2017 shows the Great Wall Station in Antarctica.



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China's icebreaker Xuelong arrives in Maxwell Bay in Antarctica
2017-01-05 15:01 | Xinhua | Editor:Xu Shanshan

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Photo taken on Jan. 4, 2017 shows China's icebreaker Xuelong at Maxwell Bay, Antarctica. Chinese research vessel and icebreaker Xuelong (Snow Dragon) on Wednesday arrived in Maxwell Bay, some 2 kms away from the Great Wall Antarctic research station, and began its unloading task. Xuelong is on its 33rd Antarctic expedition. (Xinhua/Rong Qihan)


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Research team members of China's icebreaker Xuelong transport a barge onto the Maxwell bay in Antarctica, Jan. 4, 2017. Chinese research vessel and icebreaker Xuelong (Snow Dragon) on Wednesday arrived in Maxwell Bay, some 2 kms away from the Great Wall Antarctic research station, and began its unloading task. Xuelong is on its 33rd Antarctic expedition. (Xinhua/Rong Qihan)


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Research team members of China's icebreaker Xuelong unload cargos onto a barge in Antarctica, Jan. 4, 2017. Chinese research vessel and icebreaker Xuelong (Snow Dragon) on Wednesday arrived in Maxwell Bay, some 2 kms away from the Great Wall Antarctic research station, and began its unloading task. Xuelong is on its 33rd Antarctic expedition. (Xinhua/Rong Qihan)


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Research team members transport a container by a crane at the Great Wall Station in Antarctica, Jan. 4, 2017. Chinese research vessel and icebreaker Xuelong (Snow Dragon) on Wednesday arrived in Maxwell Bay, some 2 kms away from the Great Wall Antarctic research station, and began its unloading task. Xuelong is on its 33rd Antarctic expedition. (Xinhua/Rong Qihan)
 
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China's first polar fixed-wing plane lands at Antarctica's Dome A
(People's Daily Online) 11:27, January 09, 2017

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On Jan. 8, China's first polar fixed-wing plane, Xueying 601, made a landmark landing at the airport of Kunlun Station at Dome A, about 4,000 meters above sea level. Xueying 601 took off from an airport near Zhongshan Station, reaching Kunlun Station after a flight of four hours and 45 minutes.


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On Jan. 9, 2016, Xueying 601 completed a successful test flight in Antarctica, flying over Kunlun Station.


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Xueying 601 is tailor-made for scientific research in Antarctica. It is equipped with dozens of technologies designed for the Antarctic environment. The plane not only transports scientists and equipment, it also serves as a mobile platform for experiments.


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There are two planes there.
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China starts building its first self-made expedition icebreaker

(CRI Online) 09:01, January 10, 2017

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  The photo shows the design of China's first self-made icebreaker. [Photo: State Oceanic Administration]

China's first independently-developed icebreaker for polar scientific expeditions is now under construction at the Jiangnan Shipyard Co. Ltd.

Once finished, the new icebreaker will be able to continuously break ice as thick as 1.5 meters, while sailing at a speed of two to three knots.

Compared to icebreaker Xuelong, which is currently in service, the new vessel can break ice both at the head and tail, in addition to turning around without traveling, said Wu Gang, a designer of the new icebreaker.

In addition, the new vessel will be more cold-resistant and environmentally friendly than the Xuelong, added Wu. The boat will use lighter facilities, pollution-free paint and a full electrical propulsion system, which can cut its emission to the minimum.

Since the 1980s, China has launched 33 Antarctic expeditions and seven Arctic expeditions, in addition to establishing five stations at the two polars.

Xu Ning with China's State Oceanic Administration explained that the Xuelong cannot meet the increasing need for polar researches at present, making the new vessel much needed.

The new icebreaker will be loaded with advanced ocean environment and physical geography probe equipment for scientific researches.

The new vessel is scheduled to be completed in 2019 and start polar expeditions and supply transport missions together with the Xuelong.

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The next should be nuclear Arctic icebreaker, if China is to be a true Arctic power.
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Antarctic Diary: China's Snow Eagle lands on highest Dome A, makes history
Source: Xinhua | 2017-01-10 16:32:29 | Editor: huaxia

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Snow Eagle 601 at the airport of the Zhongshan Station, Dec. 8, 2016. (Xinhua/Rong Qihan)

ANTARCTICA, Jan. 10 (Xinhua) -- China's polar flight plane Snow Eagle 601 has landed on the loftiest ice dome on the Antarctic Plateau, the first time for a fixed-wing aircraft in human's history.

The aircraft made the historical landing on Sunday at the airport of the Kunlun Station near Dome A, 4,093 meters above sea level, at 2:35 p.m. local time (5:35 p.m. Beijing Time) after flying 1,316 kilometers from the Zhongshan Station in east Antarctica.

It stayed for about two hours before returning to the eastern research station at an altitude of only 250 meters.

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Snow Eagle 601 is landing at the airport of the Kunlun Station, Jan. 8, 2017. (Xinhua)

"The landing makes it possible that China could expand its reach and existence to the whole continent," said Sun Bo, team leader of China's 33rd Antarctic expedition, which departed with the research vessel and icebreaker Xuelong from Shanghai on November 2, 2016 and was scheduled to return to Shanghai on April 11.

The expedition has a list of 72 tasks to perform including preliminary site selection for China's new base on the Ross Sea and work on fixed-wing aircraft.

After putting into use, Snow Eagle 601 has served as a mobile "experimental platform," responsible for discovering lakes and rivers hidden under ice sheets which are thousands of meters thick, and surveying areas that vehicles cannot reach.

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Snow Eagle 601 is landing at the airport of the Kunlun Station, Jan. 8, 2017. (Xinhua)

It founded the largest ever canyon on earth in the sector of Princess Elizabeth Land a year ago.

The aircraft will also offer another alternative for transportation of supply for the research stations, which has mainly been conducted by ships.

A team with China's 33rd Antarctic expedition arrived at the Kunlun Station one day before the coming of the new year. Apart from regular research missions, they were tasked with another key mission: to build a runway for Snow Eagle 601.

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Researchers pose for a photo after the landing of Snow Eagle 601 at the Kunlun Station, Jan. 8, 2017. (Xinhua)

With the whole year's average temperature being -58.4 degree, Dome A has been covered with meters-thick soft snow that has accumulated during the past winter.

"For the first time, the team members tried and finished a runway on soft snow," said Wei Fuhai, chief of the Kunlun Station.

Since 1984, China has been doing scientific research in the Antarctica for 33 years. Four research stations, Changcheng, Zhongshan, Taishan and Kunlun, have been established during this period.
 
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Chinese scientists carry out field research on King George Island
(Xinhua) 21:05, January 23, 2017

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Scientists carry out field research on the King George Island as they disembarked from Chinese research vessel Haiyang Liuhao, also known as Ocean No. 6, on the Antarctic, Jan. 22, 2017. It was the research vessel's debut of ashore expedition. Haiyang Liuhao set sail on July 2016 to the Pacific Ocean and Antarctica for a 60,000-km expedition and is expected to return in mid-April 2017. The expedition will have three tasks. It will serve as a marine resource and carry out environment evaluation in the West Pacific according to a contract with the International Seabed Authority. It will also perform distribution and comparative research on deep-sea resources in the East Pacific, and carry out comprehensive geological, geophysical and maritime research in and around the Antarctic Peninsula. (Xinhua/Wang Pan)


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Scientists take a boat to the King George Island for field research as they depart Chinese research vessel Haiyang Liuhao, also known as Ocean No. 6, on the Antarctic, Jan. 22, 2017. It was the research vessel's debut of ashore expedition. Haiyang Liuhao set sail on July 2016 to the Pacific Ocean and Antarctica for a 60,000-km expedition and is expected to return in mid-April 2017. The expedition will have three tasks. It will serve as a marine resource and carry out environment evaluation in the West Pacific according to a contract with the International Seabed Authority. It will also perform distribution and comparative research on deep-sea resources in the East Pacific, and carry out comprehensive geological, geophysical and maritime research in and around the Antarctic Peninsula. (Xinhua/Wang Pan)


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Scientists carry out field research on the King George Island as they disembarked from Chinese research vessel Haiyang Liuhao, also known as Ocean No. 6, on the Antarctic, Jan. 22, 2017. It was the research vessel's debut of ashore expedition. Haiyang Liuhao set sail on July 2016 to the Pacific Ocean and Antarctica for a 60,000-km expedition and is expected to return in mid-April 2017. The expedition will have three tasks. It will serve as a marine resource and carry out environment evaluation in the West Pacific according to a contract with the International Seabed Authority. It will also perform distribution and comparative research on deep-sea resources in the East Pacific, and carry out comprehensive geological, geophysical and maritime research in and around the Antarctic Peninsula. (Xinhua/Wang Pan)
 
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China's 33rd Antarctic expedition completes geological survey successfully in Chinese Lunar New Year
(People's Daily Online) 04:36, February 01, 2017

During the Spring Festival, China's 33rd Antarctic expedition 'Ocean VI' scientific research vessel team has completed the geological survey task along the designed routine, and successfully returned to the research vessel from China’s Antarctic Great Wall Station.

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This is the first time that the team members of “Ocean VI” boarded on Antarctic land to carry out geological reconnaissance survey.
 
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Zhongshan Station receives makeover
2017-02-28 09:11 | chinadaily.com.cn/People's Daily Online | Editor:Li Yan

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Members of China's Antarctic exploration team at the Zhongshan Station in South Pole have painted oil tankers with faces of Peking Opera characters. (Photo/Xinhua)

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Members of China's Antarctic exploration team at the Zhongshan Station in South Pole have painted new oil tanks with paper-cut patterns of the 12 Chinese zodiac animals. (Photo/Xinhua)

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Members of China's Antarctic exploration team at the Zhongshan Station in South Pole have painted new oil tanks with paper-cut patterns of the 12 Chinese zodiac animals. (Photo/Xinhua)

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Used oil tanks have been cleared and compressed, and now await transportation to China for disposal by the icebreaker Xuelong. (Photo/Xinhua)

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Members of China's Antarctic exploration team have renovated the field in front of the station, creating a space for people to work and hold activities. (Photo/Xinhua)
 
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Finance sought for radio telescope in Antarctica
By Cheng Yingqi | China Daily | Updated: 2016-12-14 07:31

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Diagram of a radio telescope that astronomers proposed to be built in Antarctica.

Astronomers hope to observe electromagnetic waves from the location known as Dome A

Chinese astronomers are applying for government funding to begin construction of a radio telescope in Antarctica that could help solve the mysteries behind stars and galaxies.

The proposed facility, to be built on a giant ice cap known as Dome A, has been designed to observe terahertz, a band of electromagnetic waves normally too weak for ground-based stations to receive.

"The high altitude and low temperatures at Dome A make it possible for astronomical observation of terahertz," said Shi Shengcai, a researcher at Purple Mountain Observatory, a facility in Nanjing affiliated with the Chinese Academy of Sciences. "The thick atmospheric layers in most other places absorb too much of the signal."

Temperatures at Dome A can fall as low as -80 C. The extreme environment is perfect for scientific experiments, but few were able to make use of it before the Polar Research Institute of China and its international partners set up the Plateau Observatory, or Plato, in 2008.

Shi's academy and the State Oceanic Administration now are applying for funding from the National Development and Reform Commission to build a 5-meter terahertz telescope at Dome A. If approved, construction will start soon and last up to five years.

The cost of the project has not been released. However, once complete, the facility is expected to be the only one of its kind on Earth.

The project has been boosted by analysis of multiple terahertz frequencies observed by equipment placed at Dome A over 19 months in 2010 and 2011. A paper on the observation data was published on Tuesday by the science journal Nature Astronomy.

"The initial success is encouraging," Shi said, adding that preliminary research for the terahertz telescope has been completed.

Electromagnetic radiation travels through space in the form of light waves and is distinguished by wavelength. In order of decreasing wavelength, there are radio waves, microwaves, infrared, visible light, ultraviolet, X-rays and gamma rays.

The wavelength of terahertz, which lies between microwaves and infrared, is important in observing the features of the dominant forms of carbon and thus could answer astronomical mysteries related to the formation and evolution of stars and galaxies.

"Terahertz have been a fruitful energy band for astronomical observation, although in the past, scientists had to observe the band using space or airborne telescopes," said Zhang Qizhou of the Smithsonian Astrophysical Observatory in the United States.

The European Space Agency's Herschel, the first space observatory to spot a broadband optical spectrum that included terahertz, was retired in 2013 after providing exciting results in many areas of astronomy.

NASA's Stratospheric Observatory for Infrared Astronomy, a modified Boeing 747SP aircraft carrying a 2.5-meter telescope, can be used for observation for only about 10 hours during each flight.

In 2008, international partners including China, the US and Australia set up a radiometer in preparation for a High Elevation Antarctic Terahertz Telescope. However, that project was later suspended.

"Astronomers thought it (observing terahertz) couldn't be done on Earth," Zhang said. "In fact, a ground-based observatory has obvious advantages, as it can hold a larger telescope and is much more flexible because astronomers can go there - it's difficult, but it's reachable - to maintain and upgrade the telescope."

Hu Zhongwen from the National Astronomical Observatories, also affiliated with the CAS, said Chinese scientists have accumulated experience in deploying and operating sophisticated equipment in the extreme conditions at Dome A.

"The harsh weather poses severe challenges to equipment there, and it wasn't possible to send people to check and fix it repeatedly, so we developed some measures to ensure the equipment is better suited to the environment," Hu said.

"It would be risky to build large scientific facilities in the polar environment without any experience. Experiments with the spectrometer have gotten us prepared for a larger project."

China to build world-class telescopes for Antarctic observatory
(People's Daily Online) 17:13, March 08, 2017

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China will build two telescopes at Dome A, the highest point on the Antarctic plateau, in an effort to upgrade the country’s observation and research capabilities.

“The plan to build the 2.5-meter Kunlun Dark Universe Survey Telescope (KDUST) and the 5-meter Dome A Terahertz Explorer (DATE5) is crucial for the establishment of China’s own observatory in Antarctica, which can help to solve scientific problems including the origins of life and the universe,” Cui Xiangqun, an academic with the Chinese Academy of Sciences and a NPC deputy, told Science and Technology Daily on March 7. Cui added that the establishment of the observatory will help China to search for Earth-like planets outside the solar system.

According to Cui, KDUST will use near-infrared light to probe dark matter, improving on the shortcomings of the Hubble telescope. DATE5 will detect light with a longer wavelength, allowing astronomers to see into dark clouds of dust and molecules.

The occupation of Dome A will be a significant step forward for astronomical research in China, as the spot will offer a larger visual field than what has previously been available, capturing images in high resolution.
 
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China to build world-class telescopes for Antarctic observatory
(People's Daily Online) 17:13, March 08, 2017

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China will build two telescopes at Dome A, the highest point on the Antarctic plateau, in an effort to upgrade the country’s observation and research capabilities.

“The plan to build the 2.5-meter Kunlun Dark Universe Survey Telescope (KDUST) and the 5-meter Dome A Terahertz Explorer (DATE5) is crucial for the establishment of China’s own observatory in Antarctica, which can help to solve scientific problems including the origins of life and the universe,” Cui Xiangqun, an academic with the Chinese Academy of Sciences and a NPC deputy, told Science and Technology Daily on March 7. Cui added that the establishment of the observatory will help China to search for Earth-like planets outside the solar system.

According to Cui, KDUST will use near-infrared light to probe dark matter, improving on the shortcomings of the Hubble telescope. DATE5 will detect light with a longer wavelength, allowing astronomers to see into dark clouds of dust and molecules.

The occupation of Dome A will be a significant step forward for astronomical research in China, as the spot will offer a larger visual field than what has previously been available, capturing images in high resolution.

Such capability is also important for Arctic, probably more important in Arctic, because of the significance of the region as potential trade route, resource extraction destination and, militarization.
 
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China develops hot water drill to facilitate Antarctic expedition
Xinhua | Updated: 2017-04-06

CHANGCHUN -- China on Wednesday announced it had completed controlled tests on its first hot-water drill, which is capable of drilling through 1,500 meters of ice and will be used for Antarctic research.

This is the fourth test on the drill, it was conducted at Jilin University in Northeast China's Jilin province.

The drill, which uses pressurized hot water to melt and bore into the ice, is capable of drilling 1,500 meters into the Amery Ice Shelf in Antarctica, the assessment panel announced after an on-site review.

"The drill will be invaluable to China's Antarctic scientific exploration," said Zhao Yue, head of the review panel and a researcher with the Chinese Academy of Geological Sciences.

The panel agreed to further testing and said the equipment should be used during China's upcoming 34th Antarctic expedition in November, he said.

Once it passes the Antarctic test, China will be the third country to have mastered hot water drilling deeper than 1,000 meters after the United States and Australia.

Our drill can go deeper than the Australian one, and has more functions than the American one, said Li Yuansheng, head of the research team and a researcher with Polar Research Institute of China.

Li said that drilling helps with the detection of ice shelves.

Ice shelves are floating ice platforms between glaciers and the ocean surface. According to Li, the freeze-thaw underneath ice shelves has an important effect on the continental ice sheets, and water masses and ocean currents.

Scientists worldwide know little about how ice shelves affect the ocean, especially given global warming, Li said. Hot water drilling may help.

The aim is to install detectors in the drilled holes, and link them to a central monitoring system.

It will help Chinese arcticologists capture more data on not only ice shelves but also global warming, said the expert.
 
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China highlights greater Arctic role
By Feng Yu Source:Global Times Published: 2017/4/9 21:28:39

Infrastructure aid can contribute to exploration, expansion of sea routes

China will contribute more to the exploration and development of the Arctic especially in infrastructure and scientific research, experts said at a meeting in Shanghai on Saturday.

"Now that our diplomatic and political relations have been normalized, I am confident that we will enjoy even closer cooperation. The fact that China is looking to the High North is positive. It gives us a shared platform to build further on," Norway Prime Minister Erna Solberg said.

Solberg made the remarks at the China-Norway Dialogue on Changes in the Arctic and International Cooperation in Shanghai.

"We have a clear vision. The Arctic should remain a safe, predictable and peaceful region, a region of international cooperation based on international law, a region where development is sustainable and where there is a good balance between commercial and industrial activity and environmental concerns," she added.

Changes in the Arctic directly affect China, especially its sea level when Arctic glaciers and the Greenland ice sheet melt. Arctic warming may also open new sea routes between East Asia and North America and Europe, Yang Huigen, director of Polar Research Institute of China, said.

Yang Jian, vice president of the Shanghai Institutes for International Studies, told the Global Times that China has been playing an important role in Arctic affairs.

China has been deeply involved in infrastructure, especially in railways, ports and telecommunications, which can contribute to the exploration and development of the Arctic, Yang Jian said.

China is also a major market for Arctic products, such as crude oil and seafood, Yang Jian added.

China, Russia, Germany and Norway, among others, have used the Arctic shipping route, Yang said, adding that the route is also expected to help the Belt and Road initiative.

Since 1999, the China National Arctic Research Expedition has carried out seven cruise missions in the Arctic Ocean using the icebreaker Xuelong, and has established two research stations, the Yellow River Station at Ny Alysund in Norway and the Joint China-Iceland Aurora Observatory in Kallhor, Iceland.

China and Norway should further cooperation on Arctic research, respond to Arctic ramifications and make greater contributions to global efforts toward a sustainable Arctic, Yang Huigen said.

Yang Jian told the Global Times that the Suez Canal and Panama Canal are reaching their full capacity. When the world rapidly develops, the Arctic shipping route will definitely play a more important role. All those involved should recognize its fragility and be mindful of protecting the environment.
 
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