UAE aims to tow icebergs to its coast from Antarctica by 2020
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UAE aims to tow icebergs to its coast from Antarctica by 2020

UAE aims to tow icebergs to its coast from Antarctica by 2020

The cost of the project is estimated at $50m-$60m

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The UAE’ National Advisor Bureau Limited has said it is progressing with its project to tow icebergs from Antarctica, with plans to complete it by 2020.

The UAE-Iceberg project was first announced in May last year and aims to leverage icebergs as new sources of water in the region.

A committee consisting of scientists, experts and specialists on Antarctica, icebergs and marine science, is now being set up, and work is also on to initiate collaboration with water research centres and universities worldwide, official news agency WAM reported.

The cost of the project is estimated at $50m-$60m.

The National Advisor Bureau Limited is also currently developing a “unique technology” which would reduce project costs, ensure zero ice melting during the transportation phase, and facilitate water-transfer processes at minimal costs, the report added.

Further details about the new technology are expected to be officially announced during the fourth quarter of this year.

The pilot phase of the project is anticipated to begin during the second half of 2019 towards the coast of Perth in Australia, or the coast of Cape Town in South Africa.

It will be followed by the necessary steps to tow the icebergs to the Fujairah coast during the first quarter of 2020, the report said.

The project will also place the UAE on the tourism map as the “first desert country to offer glacial tourism on its coasts”, it added.

Here’s a video explaining the project that was released last year –

“Cold air gushing out from a potential iceberg close to the shores of the Arabian Sea would cause a trough and rainstorms lashing out across the Arabian Gulf and the southern region of the Arabian Peninsula all year round if the glaciers persist,” the National Advisor Bureau Limited explained during the project’s launch last year.

“The icebergs are expected to have a growing cumulative impact, causing a significantly large-scale and rapid climate change.”

It added: “Moreover, having icebergs off the coast of Fujairah will become a massive and unique tourist attraction, and will contribute to cool the east coast and transform the UAE desert into thriving green meadows within a decade.”

The melting icebergs will also release fresh water into the Arabian Sea, helping “restore the ecological balance and reduce salinity of the sea”.

An iceberg contains somewhere around 20 billion gallons of fresh water.

The National Advisor Bureau Limited has also now launched a new website to highlight the most significant stages of the project.

The launch of the website coincides with the ‘Year of Zayed’ in 2018, since the project aims to support water-related calamities such as drought and other humanitarian projects, the WAM report said.


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