Mogensen, who will be the first non-American pilot to steer the
SpaceX Crew Dragon shuttle to the International Space Station (ISS),
hopes to one day fly into space on an independent European
mission.
"It would be a big honour to fly on a European spacecraft,"
Mogensen told Reuters in an interview.
The European Space Agency is currently only capable of carrying
out manned European missions in space through international
cooperations.
Western Europe meanwhile faces a gap in access to space for
satellite launches after the Ukraine conflict severed access to
the Russian Soyuz launcher, Italy’s Vega-C encountered a launch
failure and Europe’s upcoming Ariane 6 was hit by delays.
Europe’s last Ariane 5 launch takes place next month.
"I think it certainly would be a big benefit to Europe and the
space industry in Europe if we were capable of sending European
astronauts into space on a European spacecraft," Mogensen said.
"I think especially the last year or so has shown that there are
some critical technologies that we as a continent have to master
so we are not dependant on foreign countries that could then use
our lack of capabilities to pressure us," Mogensen said.
Sensitive technologies include secure communications, precise
satellite navigation and Earth observation including monitoring
of natural and man-made disasters.
In November last year the ESA asked its 22 member nations to
back a 25% boost in space funding in an effort to remain a
valued partner of the United States.
The United States is currently leading the "race for space" with
the budget of the space agency NASA rising since the White House
in 2020 called for the biggest NASA budget in decades to reach
the moon.
Since then, NASA's budget has risen yearly, amounting to $32
billion in budgetary resources in 2023, according to the
government's official spending website.
(Reporting by Johannes Birkebaek, Editing by William Maclean)
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