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Grenadier Heads to Antarctica as White Desert Deploys Fleet for Polar Logistics Operations


ineos grendier being lifted from the boat onto the ice shelf in antarctica

At the far edge of the world, where temperatures plunge, crevasses lurk beneath the surface and storms arrive without warning, logistics is the difference between success and disaster. Antarctica allows no margin for weak equipment. For the luxury expedition operator White Desert, which has been running private journeys on the continent for more than two decades, every machine deployed on the ice must justify its presence.

This season, that fleet will include a new arrival: the INEOS Grenadier.

White Desert has partnered with INEOS Automotive to deploy a small fleet of Grenadiers in support of its Antarctic operations. Four station wagons and one Quartermaster pick-up will operate around Wolf’s Fang Runway, the company’s private ice runway located deep within the Queen Maud Land region.

The vehicles will support both guest transfers and the day-to-day logistics required to keep the remote operation running. Movements between the runway and Echo Base—White Desert’s luxury camp on the Antarctic plateau—cross terrain defined by extreme cold, shifting weather patterns and the ever-present risk of hidden crevasses beneath the snow.

Before reaching the ice shelf, the vehicles completed a journey that few production 4x4s ever experience. The fleet travelled from Cape Town aboard the polar research vessel SA Agulhas II, the South African government’s icebreaking research and supply ship. Once the vessel reached Antarctica, the vehicles were craned onto the ice shelf before travelling inland to Wolf’s Fang.

ineos grenadier bing supplied to white desert

Notably, the Grenadiers arrived in factory specification. According to the companies involved, the vehicles are operating without modifications—an approach intended to demonstrate the platform’s baseline capability in extreme conditions.

For White Desert, which began Antarctic operations in 2005, reliability is more than a marketing phrase. The company’s expedition model depends on disciplined logistics and equipment capable of functioning in an environment where mechanical failure can quickly escalate into a serious safety issue.

Founder and CEO Patrick Woodhead summarised the company’s approach plainly: “We don’t bring anything into Antarctica unless it earns its place. The Grenadier has shown it can be trusted in extreme conditions, while still offering the kind of comfort that makes long days on the ice sustainable.

That balance between durability and operational practicality appears to be the central reason behind the collaboration. The Grenadier was developed specifically with remote expedition work in mind, drawing on traditional ladder-frame construction, permanent four-wheel drive and mechanical simplicity intended for field serviceability.

INEOS Automotive CEO Lynn Calder framed the deployment as validation of the vehicle’s engineering philosophy.

It’s testament to our engineering and manufacturing teams that White Desert has put its faith in the Grenadier,” she said. “It was designed and built precisely for the thrill of adventures and expeditions in the most remote places on the planet.

Alongside the operational deployment, the two organisations are documenting the project through a short film series. The footage will follow the vehicles from their arrival aboard the SA Agulhas II through testing and real-world use on the Antarctic ice.

The opening chapter captures one of the more unusual logistics operations in modern expedition travel: vehicles suspended from a ship’s crane and lowered onto the Antarctic ice shelf before beginning their inland journey.

While the Grenadiers have already reached the continent, the partnership will be fully active during the upcoming Antarctic season. Additional episodes of the film series will be released over the coming months, offering a closer look at how the vehicles perform in one of the most unforgiving environments on Earth.

For a vehicle designed around the idea of working where others cannot, Antarctica may be the most direct proving ground available.

INEOS GRENADIER


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