HILO — Thirty Meter Telescope officials plan to visit India as they continue their search for alternative sites to Mauna Kea, according to a newspaper report. ADVERTISING HILO — Thirty Meter Telescope officials plan to visit India as they continue
HILO — Thirty Meter Telescope officials plan to visit India as they continue their search for alternative sites to Mauna Kea, according to a newspaper report.
The Times of India said last week representatives of the $1.4 billion project, stalled in Hawaii following protests and legal challenges from Native Hawaiians, will stop in the mountain village of Hanle in a couple months.
The village is located in the Ladakh region near the Chinese border and is home to the Indian Astronomical Observatory at Mt. Saraswati. At 14,800 feet, the Himalayan mountain, renamed after the Hindu goddess of learning, sits about 1,000 feet taller than Mauna Kea.
Mauna Kea, home to 13 telescopes, is the tallest mountain in Hawaii and considered sacred by some Hawaiians.
Both India and China are among the partners building the next-generation observatory.
In February, TMT International Observatory Chair Henry Yang announced alternative sites would be sought in case the project is unable to renew its land use permit for Mauna Kea by the end of this year or early next year.
The Hawaii Supreme Court overturned the permit in December after ruling the state improperly approved it before the start of a contested case hearing.
Multiple roadblocks from protesters — the first starting a year ago — also prevented construction crews from grubbing and grading the site.
Meanwhile, the project’s sublease for 6 acres below the mountain’s summit has been remanded to the state Board of Land and Natural Resources.
B Eswar Reddy, TMT India program manager, told the newspaper the organization is looking at sites in the northern and southern hemispheres.
TMT officials also have recently visited observatories in the Canary Islands. Additionally, Project Manager Gary Sanders has said Chile is a potential site.
TMT’s partners include Caltech, University of California, Association of Canadian Universities for Research in Astronomy, and national institutes in Japan, China and India.
Email Tom Callis at tcallis@hawaiitribune-herald.com.