North Pole ice runway opened Monday

By Atle Staalesen, The Independent Barents Observer - April 4, 2017
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The two Antonov-74 planes successfully landed at an ice airfield Monday at Russia’s Camp Barneo on an ice floe near the North Pole.

“It is officially confirmed that the ice runway meets all the standards and Barneo starts 2017 season!,” the managers of the camp say on their Facebook page.

The full team of camp developers is now assembled on site. A third flight was expected Tuesday.

“Hurra! The Barneo is starting its 2017 season,” chief operations officer Irina Orlova says in a comment.

The camp is located on 89º24’N 135ºW, on a spot called Zhalyuzi-2 by the explorers. It is built on a carefully selected ice floe and will serve researchers, explorers and tourists over the next month.

It was two helicopters and crews from the Aerogeo company which on March 24 identified the ice floe and subsequently brought the first manpower and equipment to the site. The helicopters had made their way from the Siberian city of Krasnoyarsk on March 19. The last part of the journey included stops in Khatanga and the Sredny Island on the Severnaya Zemlya.

Meanwhile, from now on it is Longyearbyen, the administrative center in Norwegian archipelago Svalbard, which will serve as logistical base for the Barneo.

An agreement between Svalbard Governor Kjerstin Askholt and Aleksandr Orlov, Vice President of Russian Association of Polar Explorers, was reached on March 13.

That agreement did not come by itself. According to chief operations officer Irina Orlova negotiations had proceeded for half a year and on several levels. After last year’s Barneo camp, the Russian organizers announced that they were moving all logistics to Franz Josef Land.

The dispute with Norwegian authorities appeared after it became clear that the Russian Armed Forces planned to use the Longyearbyen airport for bringing in military instructors to an airborne drill in the Arctic.

Similarly, Chechen Special Forces, headed by Ramzan Kadyrov’s aide on law enforcement issues Daniil Martynov, used Longyearbyen airport in their preparation for “Flying Squad” combat group’s North Pole military exercise.