WELLINGTON, New Zealand - New Zealander Sir
Edmund Hillary, the first man to climb Mount Everest and the first to drive a
vehicle to the South Pole, described a U.S. highway to the pole as
"terrible."
Work on the 1,020-mile "ice highway" from the Antarctic coast south of
New Zealand to the South Pole is currently in its third season.
The project will enable hundreds of tons of supplies and equipment to be hauled
across the world's most inhospitable wilderness to Amundsen-Scott Base, a U.S.
research station. It's planned for completion by the end of the 2006 polar
summer.
Currently, cargo planes fly in scientists and supplies during the four-month
summer.
Hillary, who's revisiting Antarctica this week, was blunt about the project:
"I think it's terrible," according to local media reports.
New Zealand Foreign Minister Phil Goff said the road is environmentally
acceptable, but he understood Hillary's objections to the project.
"He spent weeks battling against the elements to get to the pole and it was
an enormous achievement," Goff said.
"Now you've got the concept of a marked route that takes away the challenge
and the adventure of getting there and that is anathema to Ed," he said.
Hillary led a small team 1,250 miles from New Zealand's Scott Base on the
Antarctic coast to the South Pole by tractor as part of the first
trans-Antarctic crossing in 1957.
Source: Associated Press