Monday, December 22, 2025
ADVT 
National

Medical Rescue Plane On Way To South Pole To Pick Up Sick Worker From Station

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 21 Jun, 2016 12:06 PM
  • Medical Rescue Plane On Way To South Pole To Pick Up Sick Worker From Station
CALGARY — A plane was heading to the South Pole to pick up a sick worker at a research station.
 
The National Science Foundation says one of two Twin Otters owned by Calgary-based Kenn Borek Air was expected to arrive Tuesday at 5 p.m. ET.
 
The foundation says in a release the plane took advantage of a "favourable weather window" and left this morning for the 10-hour flight.
 
The flight is necessary because a worker at the research station requires hospitalization and needs to be evacuated.
 
Foundation spokesman Peter West says there's another patient who may also need to be taken out, but that decision has yet to be made.
 
The other plane will remain at Rothera, a British station on the Antarctic peninsula, to provide search-and-rescue capability if needed.
 
West says no other details about both patients will be released due to patient confidentiality.
 
The planes left Calgary a week ago and got to Rothera on Monday. They were held up in Punta Arenas, Chile, since Thursday due to bad weather.
 
It's mid-winter in Antarctica and the foundation says flights in and out of the station are usually not planned between February and October due to extreme cold and darkness.
 
There is no tarmac runway at the Pole, so aircraft must land on skis in total darkness on compacted snow.
 
"The planes are rated to operate in temperatures as low as -75 Celsius, generally at Pole its about -60 C at this time of year but it fluctuates," West said.
 
Kenn Borek provides contractual logistical support to the Antarctic Program, according to the foundation, and conducted similar evacuations in 2001 and 2003.

MORE National ARTICLES

Matthew De Grood Just One Of Many Ncr Cases Across Canada

  Some high-profile cases in which there was a finding of not criminally responsible or such a finding was sought:

Matthew De Grood Just One Of Many Ncr Cases Across Canada

Bibeau Announces Additional $331.5 Million In Humanitarian Aid At Turkey Summit

Bibeau Announces Additional $331.5 Million In Humanitarian Aid At Turkey Summit
Bibeau says in a statement Tuesday that the new funding will help the most vulnerable in more than 32 countries.

Bibeau Announces Additional $331.5 Million In Humanitarian Aid At Turkey Summit

Text Show Talk Of Truck Theft, Incinerator More Than A Year Before Tim Bosma Died

Text Show Talk Of Truck Theft, Incinerator More Than A Year Before Tim Bosma Died
The Crown in the Tim Bosma trial says a series of text messages between the Hamilton man's accused killers shows the pair meticulously planned to steal a truck, kill its owner with a gun and incinerate the remains.

Text Show Talk Of Truck Theft, Incinerator More Than A Year Before Tim Bosma Died

British Columbians Cry Foul Over 'UnFair' Loonie-At-Par Promotion That Lured Them To Bellingham Mall

British Columbians Cry Foul Over 'UnFair' Loonie-At-Par Promotion That Lured Them To Bellingham Mall
Some B.C. shoppers who headed to Bellingham this long weekend to find big deals at Bellis Fair Mall got less than they bargained for.

British Columbians Cry Foul Over 'UnFair' Loonie-At-Par Promotion That Lured Them To Bellingham Mall

Displaced Kids In Humanitarian Crises Need More Money, Says Marie-Claude Bibeau

Displaced Kids In Humanitarian Crises Need More Money, Says Marie-Claude Bibeau
Marie-Claude Bibeau tells The Canadian Press that too little of the already insufficient amount of global humanitarian assistance is being directed to educate children forced to flee their homes.

Displaced Kids In Humanitarian Crises Need More Money, Says Marie-Claude Bibeau

Man Charged After Allegedly Impersonating Fort McMurray Wildfire Evacuee

Man Charged After Allegedly Impersonating Fort McMurray Wildfire Evacuee
RCMP says they received a complaint from Family and Community Support Services in Claresholm, Alta., because they believed a man and woman were pretending to have evacuated the wildfires.

Man Charged After Allegedly Impersonating Fort McMurray Wildfire Evacuee