NEW DELHI, June 23 : “In a nutshell, it should suffice to say that India and the USA are to break new ground in the “Space”. And, the credit goes to Prime Minister Narendra Modi who, during the last 9 years, took a series of unorthodox and path-breaking decisions, which enabled India to achieve a quantum jump in our Space sector capabilities, as a result of which the USA which had begun its space journey several years before us is today seeking collaboration with us as an equal partner.
This was stated here today by Union Minister of State (Independent Charge) Science & Technology; MoS PMO, Personnel, Public Grievances, Pensions, Atomic Energy and Space, Dr Jitendra Singh, while briefing the media about several significant decisions and agreements accomplished during Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s ongoing USA visit, especially with relation to signing of “Artemis Accord ” and Joint Indo-US mission to the International Space Station in 2024.
Dr Jitendra Singh said, could anything give us greater pride than to realise that the country like USA which landed the first human benign on the surface of Moon when we were singing nursery rhymes about Moon is today seeking our inputs and our expertise on Moon mission.
Explaining to the media, the Minister said, the purpose of the Artemis Accord is a common vision with USA and other countries via principles, guidelines and best practices so that we could supplement each other’s activities for peaceful purposes with transparency and also work together for avoiding harmful activities.
On the other hand, the joint mission to the International Space Station, said Dr Jitendra Singh, which is separate of signing of Artemis Accord will develop a framework for joint mission to the International Space Station in 2024, which the USA envisages as the possibilities of closer cooperation between the space agencies of the two countries to get closer to the realities of Moon and subsequent to Mars and other planets.
As for Science & Technology, Dr Jitendra Singh informed that on Semiconductors, Micron will invest 800 Million Dollars with additional financial support from the Indian government. Similarly, the US Quantum Consortium has welcomed and invited the Indian Quantum industry as its members.
The agreement signed during Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s historic US visit between India and the US on cooperation in Space Research will take our bilateral relations to a new high, Dr Jitendra Singh said today.
“As PM Modi said, ‘Even sky is not the limit for cooperation with the US’,” the Minister said .
Dr Jitendra Singh said, India will contribute to the International Space Station next year as part of the India-US collaboration in the Space Science field. US President Joe Biden has already confirmed this in the White House after a meeting with Prime Minister Narendra Modi on Thursday.
Dr Jitendra Singh said ISRO is likely to team up with NASA as it plans to return to the moon with a manned mission by 2025.
The joint statement by India and the United States during PM Modi’s ongoing visit said NASA would provide “advanced training” to Indian astronauts at one of its facilities.
Dr Jitendra Singh said America today realizes the importance of partnering with us. “Though India and the US have been collaborating in the Space sector for long, but the journey in the last nine years of the Modi Government has really taken off on a growth trajectory. India is no longer lagging behind in Space exploration, and today, we are equal partners in Deep Space Missions,” he said. Dr Jitendra Singh clarified there are virtually no restrictions and no technology denial by the US. “In fact, we are today technologically capable,” he said.
Dr Jitendra Singh said the ISRO has earned considerable foreign exchange by launching satellites for global clients. ISRO, in association with its commercial arms, has successfully launched 385 foreign satellites from 34 countries on board PSLV. “Almost 90% of this revenue has been generated in the last nine years,” he said.
The Artemis Accord was signed on October 13, 2020 by eight Founder Nations, – Australia, Canada, Italy, Japan, Luxembourg, UAE, UK and the United States. Its members include the traditional US allies like Japan, France, New Zealand, UK, Canada, South Korea, Australia and Spain while African nations like Rwanda, Nigeria etc are the new partners. Out of 22 European nations only 08 (Luxembourg, Italy, UK, Romania, Poland, France, Czech Republic and Spain) have signed the accord.
The Artemis Accord is a non-binding agreement with no financial commitments. The purpose of these Accords is to establish a common vision via a practical set of principles, guidelines, and best practices to enhance the governance of the civil exploration and use of outer space with intension of advancing the Artemis program. Adherence to a practical set of principles, guidelines, and best practices in carrying out activities in outer space is intended to increase the safety of operations, reduce uncertainty, and promote the sustainable and beneficial use of space for all humankind. The accords represent a political commitment to the principles described herein, many of which provide for operational implementation of important obligations contained in the Outer Space Treaty and other instruments.
The principles set out in these accords are intended to apply to civil space activities conducted by the civil space agencies of each signatory. These activities may take place on the moon, Mars, comets, asteroids, including their surfaces, as well as in orbit of the Moon or Mars, in the lagrangian points for the Earth-Moon system, and in transit between these celestial bodies and locations.
All activities under the Artemis Accord will be conducted for peaceful purposes. Partner states are to uphold the transparency principle by publicly describing policies and plans. Partner nations to utilize open international standards, develop new standards when necessary, and strive to support interoperability. Partner nations commit to taking all reasonable steps possible to render assistance to astronauts in distress and determine which of them should register relevant space objects in accordance with the Registration Convention.
International cooperation has been part of the Indian space programme since inception. ISRO’s maiden mission to Moon, the Chandrayaan-1, has been an exemplary example of international cooperation with its international payloads. It has also earned several national and international laurels and was instrumental in the ISRO-NASA joint discovery of water molecules on the moon surface, unattained by any of the previous missions of such nature.
ISRO and NASA are realizing a joint satellite mission called NISAR (NASA ISRO Synthetic Aperture Radar) for earth science studies. As part of ISRO’s prestigious Gaganyaanprogramme, the cooperation opportunities with countries and space agencies having expertise in human space flight are being explored.