'Star Trek, not Star Wars:' NASA releases basic principles for moon
exploration pact
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[May 16, 2020]
By Joey Roulette
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - NASA on Friday set
the stage for a global debate over the basic principles governing how
humans will live and work on the moon, as it released the main tenets of
an international pact for moon exploration called the Artemis Accords.
The accords seek to establish 'safety zones' that would surround future
moon bases to prevent what the U.S. National Aeronautics and Space
Administration called "harmful interference" from rival countries or
companies operating in close proximity.
They would also permit companies to own the lunar resources they mine, a
crucial element in allowing NASA contractors to convert the moon's water
ice for rocket fuel or mine lunar minerals to construct landing pads.
The accords are a key part of NASA's effort to court allies around its
plan to build a long-term presence on the lunar surface under its
Artemis moon program.
"What we're doing is we are implementing the Outer Space Treaty with the
Artemis Accords," NASA administrator Jim Bridenstine told Reuters,
referring to a 1967 international pact that emphasizes that space should
be used for peaceful rather than military uses.
The framework will be used as an incentive for nations to adhere to U.S.
norms of behavior in space, he added.
"It applies to low Earth orbit, it applies to the moon as well,"
Bridenstine said. The accords also require countries to adopt standards
of the United Nations Space Debris Mitigation Guidelines — which govern
the prevention of hazardous space debris — and the Registration
Convention, which would require countries to provide orbital details of
their "space objects."
The U.S. Congress passed a law in 2015 allowing companies to own the
resources they mine in outer space, but no such laws exist in the
international community. The Artemis Accords, consistent with the Trump
administration's space policy, appear to clear the way for companies to
mine the moon under international law and urge countries to enact
similar national laws that would bind their private sector's space
operations.
"Why would private companies take the risk of going to mine resources if
the legal situation was they could be kept from owning them?" Lori
Garver, former deputy administrator of NASA, said to Reuters. "So
anything this does to clear any of that up could really help advance
progress in space development."
CHINA AND RUSSIA
Reuters reported earlier this month that the administration of U.S.
President Donald Trump was drawing up the Artemis Accords.
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The full moon, also known as the Supermoon or Flower Moon, rises
above the Statue of Liberty, as seen from Jersey City, New Jersey,
U.S., May 7, 2020. REUTERS/Brendan McDermid/File Photo
In response, Russia's space agency chief Dmitry Rogozin criticized
Washington for excluding Russia from early negotiations over the
space exploration pact, drawing parallels with U.S. foreign policy
in the Middle East.
"The principle of invasion is the same, whether it be the Moon or
Iraq. The creation of a 'coalition of the willing' is initiated,"
Rogozin wrote on Twitter. "Only Iraq or Afghanistan will come out of
this."
China said it was willing to cooperate with all parties on lunar
exploration "to make a greater contribution in building a community
with shared future for mankind," a spokesperson for China's foreign
ministry said in a statement faxed to Reuters.
The safety zones — while intended to encourage coordination — have
prompted questions on whether the accords align with the Outer Space
Treaty, which states the moon and other celestial bodies are "not
subject to national appropriation by claim of sovereignty, by means
of use or occupation, or by any other means."
The size of the safety zones would vary depending on the nature of
the site they surround and would not constitute appropriation,
Bridenstine said.
They would follow the principle that "basically says I'm gonna stay
out of your way, you're gonna stay out of my way, and we can all
operate in this space," he added.
However, there is a question over who determines the sizes of the
safety zones, said Ram Jakhu, associate professor at McGill
University's Institute of Air and Space Law in Canada. "Safety zones
are necessary, but they can also be abused in a way that it may
become appropriation."
But Mike Gold, NASA's associate administrator for international
relations, told Reuters the language on moon mining shouldn't worry
other nations.
"The principles that are being put forward here is nothing that we
believe any responsible spacefaring nation would disagree with," he
said.
"Via the Artemis Accords, we hope that the future will look a lot
more like "Star Trek," and a lot less like "Star Wars" by getting
ahead of these issues," Gold said.
(Reporting by Joey Roulette, editing by Bill Tarrant and Rosalba
O'Brien)
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