Exclusive-Europe eyes Musk's SpaceX to replace Russian rockets
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[August 12, 2022]
By Tim Hepher and Joey Roulette
PARIS (Reuters) -The European Space Agency
(ESA) has begun preliminary technical discussions with Elon Musk's
SpaceX that could lead to the temporary use of its launchers after the
Ukraine conflict blocked Western access to Russia's Soyuz rockets.
The private American competitor to Europe's Arianespace has emerged as a
key contender to plug a temporary gap alongside Japan and India, but
final decisions depend on the still unresolved timetable for Europe's
delayed Ariane 6 rocket.
"I would say there are two and a half options that we're discussing. One
is SpaceX that is clear. Another one is possibly Japan," ESA Director
General Josef Aschbacher told Reuters.
"Japan is waiting for the inaugural flight of its next generation
rocket. Another option could be India," he added in an interview.
"SpaceX I would say is the more operational of those and certainly one
of the back-up launches we are looking at."
Aschbacher said talks remained at an exploratory phase and any back-up
solution would be temporary.
"We of course need to make sure that they are suitable. It's not like
jumping on a bus," he said. For example, the interface between satellite
and launcher must be suitable and the payload must not be compromised by
unfamiliar types of launch vibration.
"We are looking into this technical compatibility but we have not asked
for a commercial offer yet. We just want to make sure that it would be
an option in order to make a decision on asking for a firm commercial
offer," Aschbacher said.
SpaceX did not reply to a request for comment.
The political fallout from Russia's invasion of Ukraine has already been
a boon for SpaceX's Falcon 9, which has swept up other customers
severing ties with Moscow's increasingly isolated space sector.
Satellite internet firm OneWeb, a competitor to SpaceX's Starlink
satellite internet venture, booked at least one Falcon 9 launch in
March. It has also booked an Indian launch.
On Monday, Northrop Grumman booked three Falcon 9 missions to ferry NASA
cargo to the International Space Station while it designs a new version
of its Antares rocket, whose Russian-made engines were withdrawn by
Moscow in response to sanctions.
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A SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket lifts off,
carrying 53 Starlink internet satellites, from the Kennedy Space
Center in Cape Canaveral, Florida, U.S. May 18, 2022. REUTERS/Joe
Skipper
'WAKE-UP CALL'
Europe has until now depended on the Italian Vega for small
payloads, Russia's Soyuz for medium ones and the Ariane 5 for heavy
missions. Its next-generation Vega C staged a debut last month and
the new Ariane 6 has been delayed until next year.
Aschbacher said a more precise Ariane 6 schedule would be clearer in
October. Only then would ESA finalise a back-up plan to be presented
to ministers of the agency's 22 nations in November.
"But yes, the likelihood of the need for back-up launches is high,"
he said. "The order of magnitude is certainly a good handful of
launches that we would need interim solutions for."
Aschbacher said the Ukraine conflict had demonstrated Europe's
decade-long cooperation strategy with Russia in gas supplies and
other areas including space was no longer working.
"This was a wake up call, that we have been too dependent on Russia.
And this wake-up call, we have to hope that decision makers realise
it as much as I do, that we have to really strengthen our European
capability and independence."
However, he played down the prospect of Russia carrying out a pledge
to withdraw from the International Space Station (ISS).
Russia’s newly appointed space chief Yuri Borisov said in a
televised meeting with President Vladimir Putin last month that
Russia would withdraw from the ISS "after 2024".
But Borisov later clarified that Russia’s plans had not changed and
Western officials said Russia’s space agency had not communicated
any new pullout plans.
"The reality is that operationally, the work on the space station is
proceeding, I would say almost nominally," Aschbacher told Reuters.
"We do depend on each other, like it or not, but we have little
choice."
(Reporting by Tim Hepher and Joey RouletteEditing by Mark Potter)
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