Fly me to the moon: Germany eyes slice of lucrative
space market
Send a link to a friend
[April 29, 2019]
By Andrea Shalal
BERLIN Reuters) - Facing tough competition
from China, the United States and even tiny Luxembourg, Germany is
racing to draft new laws and attract private investment to secure a
slice of an emerging space market that could be worth $1 trillion a year
by the 2040s.
The drive to give Germany a bigger role in space comes as European,
Asian and U.S. companies stake out ground in an evolving segment that
promises contracts for everything from exploration to mining of
outer-space resources.
Firms likely to benefit from any future spending rise in Germany include
Airbus, which co-owns the maker of Europe's Ariane space rockets, and
Bremen-based OHB.
The new legislation would limit financial and legal liabilities of
private companies should accidents happen in orbit, set standards for
space operations and offer incentives for new projects, the German
economy ministry told Reuters.
The ministry's aerospace and space commissioner, Thomas Jarzombek, could
submit the laws to parliament later this year. The move comes as
companies and trade groups press for German authorities to establish a
regulatory framework for the lucrative new market to encourage private
investment.
"We are sounding the alarm that Germany and Europe are falling behind in
space vis-a-vis China and the United States," Dirk Hoke, defense and
space chief at Franco-German-led aerospace group Airbus, told Reuters.
"We're at a critical juncture to ensure we stay in the top league."
Germany is Europe's economic powerhouse and the world's fourth-largest
economy. However it had just the world's seventh-largest national space
budget in 2018, an estimated $1.1 billion, just over half the amount
generated by fifth-placed France, according to preliminary data from
Paris-based research firm Euroconsult.
The figure, which excludes contributions to pan-European programs, is
dwarfed by the United States - by far the largest spender on space at
almost $40 billion.
Ironically, American space ambitions could offer a lifeline.
Hoke said a new lunar Gateway program backed by U.S. space agency NASA
offered a chance for Germany and others in Europe to stake a claim to a
key role in the market.
"In my view, it is hugely important that we participate as equal
partners so that we are primed to develop and build technologies for
such a gateway," he said.
The program involves designing and developing a small spaceship that
will orbit the Moon and serve as a temporary home for astronauts and as
a base for work on the moon's surface and, later, missions to Mars. NASA
had aimed to finish the Gateway by 2026, but Washington is now aiming to
put humans back on the Moon by 2024, which could lead to an accelerated
schedule.
Even before then, Germany is facing a brain-drain as companies worldwide
ponder how to extract minerals from asteroids and water from the moon
within a decade.
Some companies are already considering moving to Luxembourg, which has
taken a lead in Europe by enacting laws to limit liabilities and ease
restrictions on mining operations. It has also set up a 100-million-euro
($112 million)investment fund for projects.
"It's a global market. We have our customers and we will keep them, even
if we have to run the company from somewhere else," said Walter
Ballheimer, CEO of German Orbital Systems, a Berlin-based start-up that
builds small satellites.
"Germany was overtaken a long time ago," he said. "But it's not too
late. If they are courageous enough and adopt a clear space policy ...
then we can still have a piece of the cake that we should have as a
leading export nation."
Two other heads of small German space companies told Reuters they were
considering leaving the country.
'LEAN' SPACE LAW
But Germany is not standing still.
Space commissioner Jarzombek is working with trade groups, companies and
other experts to draft the space laws, and plans to submit it them
parliament sometime after September.
[to top of second column] |
A model of Ariane Group's Ariane 5 rocket is pictured at the Airbus
plant in Bremen, Germany, February 19, 2019. Picture taken February
19,2019. REUTERS/Fabian Bimmer
"We are aiming for a lean basic law that is open to the future," said a
spokeswoman for Jarzombek and the economy ministry. "A national space law should
focus above all on incentives and make it possible for the German space industry
to play a bigger role in global developments."
Berlin is also pressing the United Nations to set standards for mining of the
Moon, asteroids and other objects in space.
The United States passed a law in 2015 that encouraged private companies to
undertake mining work beyond Earth, and gives its firms the right to claim
resources they may one day be able to extract from celestial bodies.
Jarzombek helped secure a 269-million-euro increase in planned funding for the
European Space Agency (ESA) in 2020-2023. But Germany's total space funding,
which includes ESA and national programs, is not expected to rise in that
period. It edged slightly lower to 1.57 billion euros in 2019.
The 18-member ESA oversees cooperation on space exploration and launches, but
individual countries have their own research and interests, funded outside the
ESA budget.
Matthias Wachter, aerospace expert at the BDI German Federation of Industry,
said advances in space were crucial for future technologies such as autonomous
driving.
"Germany is limping behind," he said.
Any spending plans would have to contend with rising budget pressures and an
economic slowdown. Germany is in its 10th year of expansion, but only narrowly
avoided recession last year.
Senior executives from Deutsche Bank and Munich Re and others met in Berlin this
month to brainstorm ways to fund and insure new space projects.
One problem is Germany's conservative approach to investment and financing as
entrepreneurs seek capital, said Sebastian Straube, CEO of investment firm
Interstellar Ventures.
Straube is building a 100-million-euro investment fund that will fund projects.
He is also working with companies like rail operator Deutsche Bahn to encourage
them to support new ventures that build applications taking advantage of
increased access to space through satellites in low-earth orbit.
SPACEX BATTLE
Marco Fuchs, CEO of satellite builder OHB, said Germany needed bigger increases
in national space funding to pay for pioneering developments, citing growing
competition worldwide.
The company carried out a privately funded commercial mission with China to
orbit the moon in 2014, and teamed up this year with Israel Aerospace Industries
to offer the commercial delivery of payloads to the lunar surface for ESA.
OHB is a key player in the battle between Europe's new Ariane 6 rocket and the
Falcon 9 built by Elon Musk's SpaceX to launch the first of two new OHB spy
satellites, called Georg, for Germany's foreign intelligence agency in 2022.
The contract, worth tens of millions of dollars, is drawing political attention
after SpaceX and Ariane traded barbs about access to each other's markets, which
could presage a transatlantic trade dispute in coming years.
OHB and the German government are expected to select the winner by late 2020,
and Fuchs said the decision would be based on many factors, including launch
dates and available budgets.
"In the end, it's always a question of the price - or a political decision," he
said.
(Additional reporting by Andreas Rinke and Tim Hepher; Editing by Pravin Char)
[© 2019 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.] Copyright 2019 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Thompson Reuters is solely responsible for this content. |