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September 8, 2016

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8,000 people moved for giant telescope

SOUTHWEST China’s Guizhou Province has started to move 8,000 people from their homes to make way for the world’s largest radio telescope which will be completed this month, according to local authorities.

The people being moved out are from eight villages in Pingtang County, of Qiannan Buyi and Miao autonomous prefecture.

With a dish the size of 30 football grounds, FAST, the Five hundred meter, Aperture Spherical Telescope, is made of 4,450 panels.

Scientists have depicted it as a super-sensitive “ear,” capable of spotting very weak messages — if there are any — from space. On completion this month, FAST will require radio silence within a 5-kilometer radius.

A relocation budget is about 1.8 billion yuan (about US$269 million), has come from the poverty relief fund and bank loans. About a third of those being resettled are living under poverty line, and meet national requirements for resettlement, said Jiang Xiaoxiang, deputy head of the Pingtang County.

Over 600 apartments have been built in two new settlements, about 10 kilometers from their original homes.

The villagers will be compensated in cash, or with new housing. Those who lost their lands will also be compensated, said Jiang. They will be offered jobs in tourism and support services for the FAST project.

Construction of the FAST began in March 2011 at a cost of 1.2 billion yuan. The telescope will be the world’s largest radio telescope, overtaking Puerto Rico’s 300m Arecibo Observatory.


 

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