Fire Breaks Out In Brazilian Antarctic Base

Published February 25, 2012 9:27PM (EST)

l lSAO PAULO (AP) — A fire at Brazil's research station in Antarctica on Saturday left two people missing and forced the evacuation by helicopter of 44 people at the base, the Brazilian navy said.

The blaze broke out in the morning in the machine room that houses the energy generators of the Comandante Ferraz station, the navy said in an emailed statement.

The website of the O Estado de S. Paulo newspaper says the two missing men died in the fire. The navy's press office declined to comment.

The statement said one man suffered non-life threatening injuries and that the 44 people at the station at the time of the fire were transferred to Chile's Eduardo Frei station.

In a second statement, the navy said efforts to extinguish the fire were suspended because of bad weather. The firefighting crew was evacuated to the Chilean base and will return once the weather improves.

Chile's Defense Minister Andres Allamand told reporters the fire had "completely destroyed" the base. O Estado de S. Paulo quoted an unnamed official of the Brazilian navy saying the same thing.

A navy spokesman said those reports were "unfounded" and that as soon as the weather improves "we will evaluate the damage the fire caused to the station's structure."

The spokesman declined to be identified because he was not authorized to speak on the matter.

Separately, he confirmed a report posted Saturday on the O Estado de S. Paulo newspaper's website that a barge carrying diesel oil to the station sank during a storm in December.

According to the newspaper, the barge was carrying 2,640 gallons (10,000 liters) of diesel in its storage tank when it capsized and sank some 3,000 feet (900 meters) from Comandante Ferraz.

No one was on the barge as it was being towed by four small vessels from Brazilian navy ships to the base, which started operations in 1984.

So far, none of the fuel has leaked and two ships are expected to reach the site in about a week to try to bring the barge to the surface before any leaks occur, the newspaper said without revealing how it obtained the information.


By Salon Staff

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