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China is to expand two scientific research stations on Antarctica and plans to build a third on the territory, large tracts of which are being claimed by several countries eager to tap its mineral resources.
A total of 189 construction workers were to leave for the South Pole from Shanghai yesterday as part of the country's 24th scientific expedition to Antarctica, Xinhua news agency said.
The workers would add facilities including a space observation station, radar, oil tanker, garage and warehouse to China's two permanent Antarctic stations.
"It is the first time for China to conduct large-scale construction there with modern building materials," the official news agency quoted an unnamed source as saying.
"The expansion will greatly enhance China's overall exploration of the Antarctic area."
The projects were expected to be finished in two to three years.
Chinese explorers on the expedition would also survey Dome A, the highest point on the continent at 4093m above sea level, to choose a site for China's third scientific research station, Xinhua said.
Several nations claiming a part of Antarctica have been outlining their case before the United Nations in what some experts are describing as the last big carve-up of territory in history.
The claims come amid growing interest in the continent's minerals. For now, though, all such claims are theoretical because Antarctica is protected by a 1959 treaty preventing mineral exploitation.
- NZPA