TMT cost estimate increases to $2.4B

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Squires
Stone
Tribune-Herald file photo TMT opponents listen to music and visit with each other July 23, 2019, on Maunakea Access Road.
An artist’s rendering of TMT against a backdrop of other Maunakea telescopes.
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HONOLULU — The cost to build the Thirty Meter Telescope is now estimated to have ballooned by a billion dollars.

“While an exact updated project cost will depend on when and where on-site construction begins for the Thirty Meter Telescope, the latest estimate for the TMT project is in the range of $2.4 billion in 2020 dollars,” said Gordon Squires, TMT vice president, in a statement this week.

The construction on Maunakea of one of the world’s largest telescopes has been stalled by foes of the embattled project who say the telescope will desecrate land considered sacred to some Native Hawaiians.

Protesters have stopped construction from going forward since mid-July

“The increase of nearly $1 billion is due to the delay in starting on-site construction in Hawaii, as well as inflation and world market cost increases for some construction items,” Squires said. “We will not know the true cost of the project until we finalize a construction site and do an analysis.”

TMT officials have an alternate location in Spain’s Canary Islands if it can’t be built on Maunakea, which is still the preferred site, regardless of the cost increase, Squires’ statement said.

TMT International Observatory Executive Director Edward Stone said each of the project’s partners, which includes Canada, India, Japan and China, would have to agree to go to the Canary Islands, the New York Times reported last week.

“We’re not there yet,” he said, though some partners were already willing to move while others wanted to wait and see what happened in Hawaii.

A final decision on the site was a few months away, said Gary Sanders, project manager for TMT, according to the Times.

Japan suspended its yearly funding for the project. But it isn’t pulling out of participation.