UK. HRH the Princess Royal officially opens Antarctic Treaty Consultative Meeting in Edinburgh PDF Print E-mail
Tuesday, 13 June 2006
Environmental news:


Around 300 scientists and legal and political advisors from 45 countries met in Edinburgh yesterday for the start of the Antarctic Treaty Consultative Meeting. The event, which runs from 12 to 23 June, will provide the opportunity to discuss the continued protection of Antarctica - the world's last great wilderness.

This is the first time since 1977 that the Antarctic Treaty Consultative Meeting has been hosted by the UK. The two-week meeting at Edinburgh International Conference Centre addresses the future environmental, policy and legal challenges facing the continent that was designated for peace and science in 1961. Issues for discussion include enhanced scientific collaboration during the forthcoming International Polar Year, sustainable tourism, biological prospecting, and managing the effects of climate change.

The meeting was opened officially by HRH the Princess Royal. In a keynote address Lord Triesman, Minister for Overseas Territories, said: 'The importance of Antarctica as a platform for science cannot be overestimated. As the effects of climate change become more evident, it will be to the Antarctic that we must continue to turn for possible answers - both to examine the pre-history of our planet locked up in Antarctic ice, and to monitor the very stability of that ice-sheet. Sea-level rise, when it comes, will partly have its origins in the southern continent.'

British Antarctic Survey (BAS) undertakes a world-class programme of scientific research and plays an influential leadership role in Antarctic affairs. Professor Chris Rapley, Director of British Antarctic Survey, said: 'The Polar Regions are crucial to the stability of the planet. But while the Antarctic Treaty System ensures scientific cooperation and collaboration in Antarctica, and seeks to protect its environment, it will increasingly have to confront the impacts on the Antarctic of change outside its jurisdiction. The forthcoming International Polar Year will provide the sound scientific underpinning for such policies and treaties.'
Last Updated ( Tuesday, 13 June 2006 )
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