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                 GREENPEACE WORLD PARK BASE

                      ANTARCTIC DIARY 23
                       Jan 11,1990


Our Resupply ship the MV Gondwana has left Auckland, New  Zealand
on the second leg of this years campaign to have this vast frozen
continent  protected  as a World Park.  This last  twelve  months
living  at  Cape  Evans has been a remarkable time  for  me  both
personally  and  as a small part of the world wide  movement  for
environmental  protection.   When  we left New  Zealand  on  22nd
December  1988 the challenge was to highlight Antarctica's  place
in  the  mind's of people all around the world.   From  the  many
contacts  we have had from many countries and from hearing  about
the growing influence of the Green political movement I feel sure
that  we  humans are collectively changing our awareness  of  the
natural  world  and in particular Antarctica's place  in  natural
order of things.

It has long been a fear that oil exploration and exploitation was
the biggest and most imminent danger that the natural world faced
in  Antarctica.  1989 seems to have been a year full of  examples
of  the  damage that can be done in the polar regions  when  fuel
spills  occur.   In our own backyard we saw  for  ourselves  that
where  large quantities of fuel are handled the possiblities  for
large  spills  seems  to be almost inevitable.   The  US  McMurdo
Station, 25Km to the south has had a series of large fuel  spills
in  the last eighteen months ( Over 450 000 Litres or nearly  118
000  US Gals ) and none of these spills have been cleaned  up  to
date.   While we were investigating the environmental  impact  of
one  of  these spills in early October we uncovered  yet  another
fuel  spill  which was later admitted to be in fact a  number  of
spills  going back as far as 1983 and no records exist  of  these
periodic  spills.  This spill site was only 150 Metres  from  New
Zealand's Scott Base and was on an area of foreshore sea-ice that
thaws each summer thus releasing the contaminating fuel  directly
into the sea.

Both  New Zealand and the US are major sponsors of  the  Minerals
Convention  which  is an agreement  among  the  Antarctic  Treaty
signatory nations.  This Convention which is also know around the
world as the Wellington Convention, after the capital city of New
Zealand  was  negotiated  behind  closed  doors,  sets  out   the
conditions under which minerals can be extracted from Antarctica.

There  are  a growing number of governments,  now  responding  to
public opinion at home opposing the ratification of this Minerals
Convention.   Australia, France, Italy and Belgium have  rejected
the  convention  and along with a number of other  countries  are
actively  pushing  for a  comprehensive  Envronmental  Protection
agreement for Antarctica in the form of a Wilderness Reserve.

Oil hungry nations and their supporters remain in favour of  this
Miners  Convention stating that they wish to keep  their  options
open  for future oil exploration of Antarctica while  reluctantly
pursuing  the more sensible path of energy conservation  and  the
development of alternative energy systems.

Well, in my last diary written at World Park Base I found  myself
with  the  treat  of oil-exploration in my  mind  and  I  haven't
written  about  the Polar summer that is blazing  around  me.   I
suspect that there are two factors involved in my  preoccupation.
The  news of the rusting hulk of the Kharg 5 tanker spilling  its
contents uncontrollably into the Atlantic off the Morroccan coast
has  brought  back to me the 1989 events... the Bahia  Paraiso  -
Anvers Isand Antarctica, the Exxon Valdez - Prince Philips  Sound
Alaska, the US South Pole Station,  the US airfield McMurdo Sound
Antarctica...  all  sites  of environmental  disasters  in  Polar
regions.   The  other  factor is that as a  New  Zealander  I  am
saddened  by the fact that my government remains a major  sponsor
of a Miners Convention for Antarctica.

Outside  my window the sea-ice is in full-melt and the  stretches
of  open  water are growing before our eyes.  In the  Cape  Evans
area  more than twenty Weddell Seals are basking ashore  and  the
Skua  chicks  are  growing.   The  amazing  thaw  that  we   have
experienced  this year continues to feed the thousands of  little
streams and dozens of miniature lakes that dot the area.  We have
had  about two week of settled weather, ideal for  preparing  the
base  for  the  arrival of our resupply ship  and  our  many  old
friends.

My  kindest regards to all our supporters and friends as my  time
here at World Park base comes rapidly to and end.

Phil Doherty.