The Prague Post - Europe to hold competition to build space cargo ship

EUR -
AED 4.258946
AFN 73.644244
ALL 95.798613
AMD 437.043724
ANG 2.075528
AOA 1063.432933
ARS 1622.920043
AUD 1.620274
AWG 2.087436
AZN 1.975819
BAM 1.950622
BBD 2.337955
BDT 142.182605
BGN 1.910753
BHD 0.437819
BIF 3445.358972
BMD 1.159687
BND 1.476226
BOB 8.020814
BRL 6.028514
BSD 1.160854
BTN 106.577032
BWP 15.512227
BYN 3.409309
BYR 22729.862161
BZD 2.334564
CAD 1.573139
CDF 2522.318599
CHF 0.903286
CLF 0.026191
CLP 1033.814027
CNY 7.975134
CNH 7.971537
COP 4303.71385
CRC 548.159202
CUC 1.159687
CUP 30.731701
CVE 109.974044
CZK 24.386588
DJF 206.706686
DKK 7.473567
DOP 69.686833
DZD 152.476734
EGP 60.270435
ERN 17.395303
ETB 180.058429
FJD 2.547719
FKP 0.861723
GBP 0.863555
GEL 3.154192
GGP 0.861723
GHS 12.524917
GIP 0.861723
GMD 84.657029
GNF 10176.296199
GTQ 8.900452
GYD 242.858522
HKD 9.076522
HNL 30.724243
HRK 7.533097
HTG 152.210581
HUF 387.760437
IDR 19594.068932
ILS 3.605762
IMP 0.861723
INR 106.706788
IQD 1520.676783
IRR 1532758.102435
ISK 145.030416
JEP 0.861723
JMD 182.141255
JOD 0.822219
JPY 183.83584
KES 149.889079
KGS 101.414382
KHR 4658.774825
KMF 490.547711
KPW 1043.757932
KRW 1710.967761
KWD 0.355699
KYD 0.967341
KZT 565.653464
LAK 24866.319001
LBP 103950.02288
LKR 360.826925
LRD 212.419838
LSL 18.893894
LTL 3.424254
LVL 0.701483
LYD 7.410554
MAD 10.824608
MDL 19.977576
MGA 4815.34321
MKD 61.590751
MMK 2434.688632
MNT 4152.733598
MOP 9.353912
MRU 46.07689
MUR 53.240931
MVR 17.928903
MWK 2012.809472
MXN 20.442351
MYR 4.54191
MZN 74.160483
NAD 18.893813
NGN 1621.636342
NIO 42.717903
NOK 11.173391
NPR 170.525785
NZD 1.957818
OMR 0.44588
PAB 1.160834
PEN 4.049551
PGK 5.003848
PHP 68.772327
PKR 324.328623
PLN 4.259037
PYG 7558.133978
QAR 4.233001
RON 5.093927
RSD 117.403854
RUB 92.360375
RWF 1697.039452
SAR 4.35133
SBD 9.337405
SCR 15.958452
SDG 696.971804
SEK 10.670186
SGD 1.476734
SHP 0.870065
SLE 28.533318
SLL 24318.052542
SOS 662.259298
SRD 43.533452
STD 24003.176292
STN 24.435877
SVC 10.157128
SYP 129.016644
SZL 18.899324
THB 36.79334
TJS 11.108706
TMT 4.070501
TND 3.394818
TOP 2.792248
TRY 51.134117
TTD 7.876196
TWD 36.851018
TZS 3009.387547
UAH 50.933226
UGX 4300.640443
USD 1.159687
UYU 46.816542
UZS 14109.609718
VES 505.27161
VND 30441.77968
VUV 138.490957
WST 3.16681
XAF 654.237383
XAG 0.013442
XAU 0.000224
XCD 3.134112
XCG 2.091965
XDR 0.813661
XOF 654.240197
XPF 119.331742
YER 276.70102
ZAR 18.991954
ZMK 10438.571552
ZMW 22.519808
ZWL 373.418691
  • CMSD

    0.0250

    23.105

    +0.11%

  • RBGPF

    0.1000

    82.5

    +0.12%

  • BCE

    -0.4750

    25.915

    -1.83%

  • RIO

    -0.6300

    91.05

    -0.69%

  • CMSC

    0.0600

    23.31

    +0.26%

  • GSK

    -0.1050

    55.215

    -0.19%

  • BCC

    -0.4900

    72.05

    -0.68%

  • NGG

    0.0700

    89.92

    +0.08%

  • RYCEF

    0.7800

    17.68

    +4.41%

  • RELX

    -0.2300

    34.96

    -0.66%

  • AZN

    -1.3590

    193.631

    -0.7%

  • JRI

    0.1250

    12.765

    +0.98%

  • BP

    0.9250

    40.865

    +2.26%

  • VOD

    -0.1050

    14.355

    -0.73%

  • BTI

    -0.6800

    58.73

    -1.16%

Europe to hold competition to build space cargo ship
Europe to hold competition to build space cargo ship / Photo: E PRIGENT, P BAUDON - ESA-CNES-Arianespace/Optique/AFP/File

Europe to hold competition to build space cargo ship

The European Space Agency announced Monday it would hold a competition between firms to build a ship to deliver cargo to the International Space Station, in a potential first step towards independent missions carrying astronauts.

Text size:

The ESA's 22 member states, whose space ministers were meeting at a two-day summit in the Spanish city of Seville, also agreed to provide financial support for Europe's long-delayed Ariane 6 rocket.

The summit comes at a difficult time for European space efforts, as the Ariane 6 delays have left the continent without a way to independently blast its missions into space.

Europe also faces growing competition not just from the United States, but newer players China and India, as well as private companies such as billionaire Elon Musk's SpaceX.

ESA chief Josef Aschbacher told the summit that "a new economy is developing in low Earth orbit that will transform space exploration," adding that "private companies are revolutionising the landscape from launchers to exploration".

Aschbacher proposed "a competition between innovative European companies" to develop a ship that would transport cargo to the ISS by 2028 -- then bring it back to Earth.

The project will require "transport, docking and re-entry capability, something Europe does not possess today," he added.

"The service vehicle could later evolve to a crew vehicle and serve other destinations beyond low Earth orbit," he said.

Aschbacher also called on Europe to decide on the scale of its ambitions in space. In April, experts in a report commissioned by the ESA called for Europe to establish a "sustained presence" on the surface of the Moon.

- 'First step' -

A source close to the negotiations told AFP that "if we want to carry out manned flights, (the cargo ship competition) is the first step."

"You have to be able to send a cargo ship to a station and come back. That is the first brick," the source added.

Aschbacher said that 75 million euros ($80 million) had been secured to fund the first phase of the project, which companies would also contribute to.

The Exploration Company, a French-German start-up already developing a vehicle to deliver cargo to potential future private space stations, welcomed the news.

"This is a new ambition for Europe," the firm's CEO Helene Huby told AFP.

Huby said the ESA's "reasonable" approach followed the roadmap of SpaceX and the US, Russian and Chinese space programmes.

"One starts with the cargo ship and then sends people," she said.

The competition indicates a new approach by the ESA based on the model of US space agency NASA, meaning that for future missions it could buy a ride on the rockets of private companies rather than developing its own such programmes.

This idea seems to clash with the long-standing ESA principle of geographic return, which holds that each country's investment should result in a roughly equal industrial benefit for its companies.

Aschbacher suggested that this principle should be called into question.

- 'Launcher crisis' -

The summit also aimed to address Europe's "launcher crisis," which Aschbacher said was the "most serious" in the history of the continent's space efforts.

Already delayed by four years, Europe's next-generation Ariane 6 rocket is now not scheduled to make its maiden flight until next year.

Europe lost access to Russia's Soyuz rockets after Moscow invaded Ukraine last year, and its smaller Vega C launcher is still grounded after the failure of its first commercial flight in December.

The ESA announced at the summit that the Ariane 6 programme would receive 340 million euros ($365 million) following negotiations between France, Germany and Italy, the agency's three biggest contributors.

The Vega C rocket could be subsidised to the tune of 21 million euros a year from its 26th to 42nd flight, it added.

The ESA also announced it would "harness space for a greener future".

Last week, the ESA and the European Union agreed to join forces to accelerate the use of Earth observation missions to collect climate change data.

F.Prochazka--TPP