Europe

ΠΕΤΑΕΙ..ΤΟ ΔΙΑΣΤΗΜΙΚΟ ΠΡΟΓΡΑΜΜΑ ΤΗΣ Ε.Ε.- EUROPE'S SPACE PROGRAMM lift off

 


Με το μεγαλύτερο budget που έχει δοθεί μέχρι σήμερα, στα 14,88 δισ. ευρώ, το νέο Διαστημικό Πρόγραμμα της ΕΕ (EU Space Programme) γίνεται πλέον πραγματικότητα, σηματοδοτώντας, όπως ανακοινώθηκε, μια νέα εποχή για την ευρώπη στο διάστημα.

«Με τη δημιουργία του πρώτου ενοποιημένου Διαστημικού Προγράμματος, η ΕΕ ενισχύει τη στρατηγική της για να αξιοποιήσει τη δύναμη του διαστήματος ώστε να επανεκκινήσει την οικονομία της μετά την COVID, να αντιμετωπίσει την κλιματική αλλαγή, να κάνει μετάβαση στην ψηφιοποίηση και να διασφαλίσει την αυτονομία και κυριαρχία της» αναφέρεται σε ανάρτηση στην ιστοσελίδα της EUSPA (European Union Agency for the Space Programme).

Η αύξηση του προϋπολογισμού για το 2021-2027 υπογραμμίζει τις προσδοκίες της ΕΕ για το διάστημα ως οικονομικής «ατμομηχανής» με πιθανές προεκτάσεις σε πολλές βιομηχανίες. Όπως θεωρείται, μέχρι το 2025 οι δουλειές που σχετίζονται με το διάστημα ανά την Ένωση θα έπρεπε να έχουν αυξηθεί στις 400.000.

«Τα διαστημικά δεδομένα είναι αναντικατάστατο εργαλείο για τους διαμορφωτές πολιτικές, που βοηθά...στην αντιμετώπιση των προκλήσεων του σήμερα και του αύριο. Ειδικότερα τα Galileo, EGNOS και Copernicus υποστηρίζουν ένα μεγάλο εύρος πολιτικών της ΕΕ» συμπληρώνεται, ενώ τονίζεται πως ένα στιβαρό ευρωπαϊκό διαστημικό πρόγραμμα, ασφαλές από κυβερνοεπιθέσεις και υποστηριζόμενο από ένα εύρος επίγειων κέντρων και υποδομών, διασφαλίζει την αυτονομία και την κυριαρχία της ΕΕ.

Στο πλαίσιο του προγράμματος θα ενισχυθούν οι επενδύσεις σε τομείς όπως η δορυφορική πλοήγηση, η παρατήρηση της Γης, οι ασφαλείς τηλεπικοινωνίες κ.α. Η EUSPA θα έχει την επίβλεψη των δραστηριοτήτων της ΕΕ σε τροχιά.

Όπως αναφέρει το BBC, άλλη σημαντική εξέλιξη έχει να κάνει με τη φύση της σχέσης της ΕΕ με τον ΕΟΔ: Πρόκειται για ξεχωριστούς φορείς, με εθνικές συμμετοχές που δεν ταυτίζονται, πχ το Ηνωμένο Βασίλειο είναι στον ΕΟΔ μα όχι στην ΕΕ και ως εκ τούτου όχι στην EUSPA. Ωστόσο η ΕΕ χρησιμοποιεί τον ΕΟΔ ως τεχνικό σύμβουλο κ.α. Nαυτεμπορική 

The new EU space programme has been officially launched.

It'll cover the period to 2027 and will see the bloc's 27 member states deepen investments in satellite-navigation, Earth observation, space situational awareness and secure communications, among other activities.

It also establishes a new body called the EU Agency for the Space Programme.

Euspa will have oversight of everything the European Union does as a bloc in orbit.

Another key advance in the new programme is the nature of the EU's relationship with the European Space Agency (Esa).

The pair are separate entities with national memberships that don't completely overlap - for example, the UK is in Esa but not in the EU, and therefore not in Euspa. But the EU uses Esa as its technical adviser and industrial procurement agent.

The legalistic underpinning of this "marriage" has now been put on a formal footing in the guise of a Financial Framework Partnership Agreement (FFPA).

The FFPA defines responsibilities and details the amount of money that will pass directly from the EU to ESA up to 2027 - some €9bn (£8bn; $11bn) out of a total EU space budget of €14.88bn. (The EU now funds a quarter of all Esa activities.)

Sentinel-3 cloud-free mosaic of EuropeIMAGE COPYRIGHTCOPERNICUS DATA/ESA/SENTINEL 3
image captionThe EU and Esa are separate legal entities whose memberships are not identical

EU funding during the coming period will help develop a next generation of Europe's satellite-navigation system, Galileo, and extend the scope and capabilities of its Copernicus-Sentinel spacecraft, which monitor the state of the planet.

But in launching the new programme, Thierry Breton, commissioner for the internal market, stressed the need for Europe to become more agile.

"Space is going through massive transformation and rapid industrialisation, all around the world," he said.

"For Europe to maintain its leadership, we must rethink the way we do space in Europe. We must adapt to fast developments and anticipate new ones.

"We must set an ambitious - and disruptive - space agenda for the future: Be more dynamic, more innovative, more risk-taking!"

The worry is that Europe is falling behind more fleet-of-foot entrepreneurs in the US, as well as the financial muscle that China is able to put behind its space programme.

Chinese astronautsIMAGE COPYRIGHTEPA
image captionChina can launch its own astronauts to its own space station - Europe cannot

Josef Aschbacher, the director general of Esa, said: "We all know that in the US, the public spending is about five, six, seven times as large as in Europe; and the private spending is enormous. In 2019, the private sector (in the US) put $5bn into space. In Europe, in start-ups and SMEs, it was $188m. So a fraction of [what it was in the US].

"China, as we all see in the news, is investing enormously. We've just witnessed three [astronauts] going to their own space station on their own rocket. And it makes me reflect - what does Europe want to achieve?"

Dr Aschbacher has proposed, along with Mr Breton, that a special summit be convened next year to try to establish the true level of ambition in Europe. What does it want to do and is it prepared to pay what it costs?

The FFPA between the European Commission and Esa was negotiated over recent months. Tuesday's signature became possible only after all the agency's member states had approved the agreement's contents.

These nations included those, such as the UK, who are not in the EU.

Galileo satellitesIMAGE COPYRIGHTARIANESPACE/CNES/ESA
image captionThe UK is no longer in the EU's Galileo sat-nav project, but it would like to continue in Copernicus

Britain voted through the document at Esa's council last week, but only after two red lines were respected.

The first concerned job discrimination within Esa. UK nationals cannot be prevented from working on EU-funded projects at the agency, except where the work relates to the most sensitive security aspects of those projects.

And the second red line touched on intellectual property developed through R&D at Esa. If the EU wants primacy over that IP, it must state its interest right at the outset of a project. The UK does not want to fund innovations which it is then prevented from exploiting.

There's a danger that security exclusions, and how tightly they are drawn, could become an area of increasing friction between the UK and the EU.

If already sour relations deteriorate further, it's not impossible that we could see future British directors at Esa being asked to "step out of the room" when sensitive security matters of interest to the EU are being discussed.

Much will depend on the protocols now being developed by the EU and the UK as part of their beyond-Brexit relationship.

Britain wishes to continue participation in some EU programmes, including Copernicus and the science research framework known as HorizonEU, which includes a number of space-related activities.

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