By Peter B. de Selding, Space News | July 31, 2015 08:51am ET
From left to right, Russia's Zvezda Service Module and Zarya FGB attached to the U.S. Unity module in 2000. Credit: NASA |
The 22-nation European Space Agency confirmed that the Russia space agency, Roscosmos, had notified ESA and the other partners of its commitment to 2024, a decision that followed similar guarantees by NASA – the station's general contractor – and the Canadian Space Agency.
That leaves ESA and the Japanese space agency, JAXA, as the only two current partners yet to make a decision. ESA has yet to commit even to 2020 but expects to do so at a meeting of its member governments in late 2016. [Quiz: The International Space Station]
Like NASA and Russia, ESA and JAXA both have their own research laboratories attached to the space station.
It remains unclear when the station will need to be retired. Early assessments are that it could remain operational, without a sharp increase in maintenance charges, to 2028 and perhaps longer.
This story was provided by SpaceNews, dedicated to covering all aspects of the space industry.
No comments:
Post a Comment