The
ESA's press office confirmed the talks in an emailed statement,
but gave no indication of the outcome. An update could follow a
planned ESA Council meeting on Wednesday, it said.
The agency said in March it was suspending cooperation with
Roscosmos over their joint ExoMars programme in the wake of
Russia's invasion in Ukraine and sanctions imposed on Moscow.
Dmitry Rogozin, the head of Roscosmos, told the Russian TASS
news agency over the weekend that the ESA would consult its
members following the talks, but added that the chances for
cooperation to resume were low.
"If they meet halfway and say they agree, then the mission can
be implemented," TASS cited Rogozin as saying, adding that the
launch could take place in 2024.
He said the chances of a positive answer from ESA members were
low, at 7-8%.
Rogozin said in April that restoration of joint space projects
would only be possible once Western sanctions against Moscow
were lifted.
Russia also participates with the West on the International
Space Station, the largest artificial object in space. The ESA
said in May it does not expect Russia to terminate joint
operation of the station.
(Reporting in Melbourne by Lidia Kelly; editing by Richard
Pullin)
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