RTSat, 28 Mar 2015 07:46 UTC
© nasa.govArtist concept shows the Sierra Nevada Corp. (SNC) Space Systems Dream Chaser spacecraft attached to the International Space Station.
In a landmark decision, Russian space agency Roscosmos and its US counterpart NASA have agreed to build a new space station after the current International Space Station (ISS) expires. The operation of the ISS was prolonged until 2024.
"We have agreed that Roscosmos and NASA will be working together on the program of a future space station," Roscosmos chief Igor Komarov said during a news conference on Saturday.
The talks were held at Baikonur cosmodrome in Kazakhstan.
The two agencies will be unifying their standards and systems of manned space programs, according to Komarov.
"This is very important to future missions and stations."The ISS life cycle was to expire in 2020.
"Under the ISS program the door will be open to other p
articipants," Komarov told reporters.
The next goal for the two agencies is a joint mission to Mars, NASA chief Charles Bolden told journalists.
Roscosmos and NASA are working with each other and other partners on a global roadmap of space exploration, Bolden said.
"Our area of cooperation will be Mars. We are discussing how best to use the resources, the finance, we are setting time frames and distributing efforts in order to avoid duplication."
NASA is currently committed to commercializing space activities.
"We are consciously moving away from government financing of low-orbit missions," Bolden said, adding that sometimes NASA
"has been criticized" for that.
At the same time, he stressed that the US has not abandoned its goal of returning to the moon. In the future, NASA is planning
"to attract more private developers to our joint exploration projects of the Moon and Mars," Bolden said.
Russia & US agree to build new space station after ISS, work on joint Mars project
Comment: If NASA "doesn't want" the government to finance low-orbit missions, they - and the government - must have reached an agreement with private companies, notably
Virgin Galactic and
SpaceX. Governments now seem to be more interested in controlling the lucrative travel destinations: space stations, the Moon and Mars.
Cheap mass transportation -
like airlines today - will be left to private companies, since that area
isn't so profitable. It appears that governments will have their hands full with mining,
extracting resources from the Moon and Mars.
Comment: If NASA "doesn't want" the government to finance low-orbit missions, they - and the government - must have reached an agreement with private companies, notably Virgin Galactic and SpaceX. Governments now seem to be more interested in controlling the lucrative travel destinations: space stations, the Moon and Mars.
Cheap mass transportation - like airlines today - will be left to private companies, since that area isn't so profitable. It appears that governments will have their hands full with mining, extracting resources from the Moon and Mars.