Polar ship Sir David Attenborough sails into open seas for trials

NEW BRIGHTON (UK) – After a storm delay, Britain’s new polar expedition ship, the Sir David Attenborough, has sailed into the open seas in order to begin trials before it makes its maiden voyage to Antarctica in 2021 for studies on climate change.

The 200 million pound, state-of-the-art, polar research vessel, with its red hull and a bright yellow crane on its stern, sailed past Liverpool’s historic docks and out into the sea, headed for north Wales.

Officially the ship is named after the veteran BBC naturalist David Attenborough, but to many Britons it will always be known as “Boaty McBoatface”, after that suggestion topped a public poll to name the vessel in 2016.

Its departure from Liverpool was delayed by around a week due to stormy weather, a British Antarctic Survey (BAS) spokeswoman said, with calm seas preferred to test and calibrate its specialist equipment for the first time.

It will remain at sea for just under a week before berthing in Holyhead, Wales, once the current Welsh coronavirus lockdown ends on Nov. 9, the spokeswoman added.

The BAS will operate the ship, carrying out ice trials in the Arctic in early 2021 before a journey to the Antarctic in November next year, where scientists say it will transform UK research in polar regions.

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