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Chilean meeting in Antarctica sends message to Russia over territory – The Irish News

Chilean meeting in Antarctica sends message to Russia over territory – The Irish News

Chile’s defense officials gathered Thursday at the bottom of the planet to try to strengthen territorial claims in Antarctica as tensions rise over Russia’s maneuvers in the polar region.

Members of Chile’s parliamentary defense committee traveled to a desolate air base for a meeting billed as an assertion of national sovereignty.

Pointing to Russia as posing such a threat, committee member Camila Flores said: “We will sit in Antarctica in an act of sovereignty, to safeguard and support our national integrity in the face of any threat. »

They revealed little about their discussions on the glacier-filled base, saying only that they addressed “the prevailing geopolitical conditions” on the white continent which has vast mineral resources, fresh water reserves and no government.

The usual inhabitants of the Antarctic region
The usual inhabitants of the Antarctic region (UK Antarctic Heritage Fund/PA)

The meeting comes as media reported the discovery of huge oil reserves in Antarctica in 2020, when the Russian polar research vessel Alexander Karpinsky reportedly discovered around 500 billion barrels of crude oil.

The issue resurfaced earlier this month during a British parliamentary session in which experts warned that Russian geological surveys could jeopardize the region’s decades-long ban on mining.

The Russian surveys took place in the Weddell Sea, where Chile’s territorial claims overlap those of Britain and Argentina, according to documents presented to the British parliament.

“We will continue to defend what we believe is right,” said Francisco Undurraga, head of Chile’s defense committee, condemning the “artful aspirations” of nations rushing to assert greater influence over Antarctica in a global more and more hungry for energy.

When reports of Russian resource extraction plans surfaced earlier this month, Argentina questioned whether Russia had scientific or economic intentions.

Chilean President Gabriel Boric has promised to “firmly oppose any commercial exploitation of minerals and hydrocarbons”.

Historic tensions over Antarctic claims have also resurfaced between Mr. Boric’s left-wing government and Argentina’s far-right government.

In an effort to reshape Argentina’s foreign policy in line with that of the United States, Argentine President Javier Milei announced last month the construction of a naval base in the south with U.S. participation to help l Argentina to claim Antarctica, sparking complaints from the Chilean Foreign Ministry.

Geopolitical competition is just the latest issue to test the Antarctic Treaty, signed in 1959 by 53 countries, which enshrined the territory as a scientific reserve used only for peaceful purposes.

Sea level rise due to climate change, unregulated tourism and krill fishing in the Southern Ocean are just a few other challenges that the consensus-based system is struggling to address.